Friday, 16 June 2017

Sarnia's Got Big News In Biochemicals

BioAmber plant on Vidal St. Zach Neal photo.



From Paul Morden, Sarnia Observer.


The arrival of bio-based succinic acid in the marketplace is creating new markets for the building-block chemical BioAmber manufactures in Sarnia.

BioAmber vice-president Anne Waddell spoke about the potential for bio-succinic acid, a chemical the Montreal-based company makes from corn syrup, during a presentation Wednesday at the Sarnia-Lambton Bio-Industrial Symposium.

The company formed less than a decade ago and began making bio-succinic acid, a chemical traditionally made from oil, at a pilot plant in France, using technology that originated in the 1990s with the U.S. Department of Energy.

In 2015, BioAmber opened a $141-million plant in Sarnia and is considering building a second larger $500-million production site in Sarnia or Louisiana.




Also from Paul Morden, Sarnia Observer.


Another bio-chemical company is planning to set up shop in Sarnia-Lambton.

Sarnia-based Bioindustrial Innovation Canada, a government-funded not-for-profit agency, said Wednesday it has made an investment in Origin Materials, a company in Sacramento that is expected to build its first commercial-scale demonstration facility in Sarnia by late 2018.

“This is really big news,” said Sandy Marshall, executive director of Bioindustrial Innovation Canada.

“These guys are producing a platform chemical with a similar sort of priority and impact as what BioAmber had.”




Thank you for reading.


 

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