Local attention for cellulose recovery

Local attention for cellulose recovery

A local newspaper, from Koedijk, publisched an article about the recovery of cellulose at our pilot site in Warmenhuizen. The article is written in Dutch and can be found on the Dutch page for those that want to read it.

Local attention for cellulose recovery

A local newspaper, from Koedijk, publisched an article about the recovery of cellulose at our pilot site in Warmenhuizen. The article is written in Dutch and can be found on the Dutch page for those that want to read it.

Local attention for cellulose recovery2019-10-21T10:50:43+00:00

New possibilities for recovered cellulose

The German students Melissa Kramer, Lobke Beckfeld, Nicholas Plunkett en Eli Goltermann have made beautiful products with cellulose recovered from wastewater. They show what the possibilities are with recycled, used toiletpaper. The students have presented their work on the 6th and 7th of July at the Highschool of art Weißensee in Berlin.  Their video is posted on the Cellvation LinkedIn page.

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6552846830076518400

The German students Melissa Kramer, Lobke Beckfeld, Nicholas Plunkett en Eli Goltermann have made beautiful products with cellulose recovered from wastewater. They show what the possibilities are with recycled, used toiletpaper. The students have presented their work on the 6th and 7th of July at the Highschool of art Weißensee in Berlin.  Their video is posted on the Cellvation LinkedIn page.

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6552846830076518400

New possibilities for recovered cellulose2019-07-11T10:46:32+00:00

Removal of drug residues with bio activated carbon from recovered cellulose

An installation that removes drug residues from wastewater will be placed on the waste water treatment plant in Ede. The recovered cellulose (flushed toilet paper) is used by water authority Valei en Veluwe to make bio-char that will adsorb the drug residues. It is a world first that contributes to solving a growing environmental problem. The Ditch companies CirTec and PulsedHeat are the technology suppliers and partners within the European Interreg project WOW!. “It is good that especially the SMEs make this innovation possible with the water authority, focussed on clean water and a circular economy”.

The full article (in Dutch) can be read in Vallei and Veluwe’s public year report from page 5: adobe.ly/2XcJeQB

An installation that removes drug residues from wastewater will be placed on the waste water treatment plant in Ede. The recovered cellulose (flushed toilet paper) is used by water authority Valei en Veluwe to make bio-char that will adsorb the drug residues. It is a world first that contributes to solving a growing environmental problem. The Ditch companies CirTec and PulsedHeat are the technology suppliers and partners within the European Interreg project WOW!. “It is good that especially the SMEs make this innovation possible with the water authority, focussed on clean water and a circular economy”.

The full article (in Dutch) can be read in Vallei and Veluwe’s public year report from page 5: adobe.ly/2XcJeQB

Removal of drug residues with bio activated carbon from recovered cellulose2019-07-11T11:11:12+00:00