Saturday, November 13, 2021

Shell to pave roads with plastic-enhanced asphalt


Chrissy Suttles, Beaver County Times
Fri, November 12, 2021,

The Shell Chemicals ethane cracker plant shown under construction Aug. 20, 2020, in Potter Township.
SHELL SCOTFORD ALBERTA IS A SHELL ETHANE CRACKER PLANT

POTTER TWP. — Shell Polymers will partner with a chemical recycling company to pave roads at its petrochemical site with asphalt enhanced with recycled plastic additive.

Shell on Thursday announced plans to pave nearly six miles of site roads and 47,000 square yards of parking lots with the mix at its Beaver County site, which will begin turning natural gas into plastic pellets next year.

Company representatives said the project will “utilize the equivalent of 3 million plastic grocery bags, reducing waste in landfills.”

More: One year of COVID: Building an ethane cracker plant during a pandemic

The partnership with Canada-based GreenMantra Technologies began in March 2020, when crews at the future Potter Township facility laid a test strip with the modified asphalt next to traditional asphalt and monitored it for a year. The test strip’s performance, compared to its partner, prompted leadership to use it more broadly throughout the project.

More: Shell hit with violations for chemical odor in county; investigation ongoing

GreenMantra converts waste plastics such as grocery bags and film into specialty chemicals for use in roofing, paving and other industries. The technology aims to reduce energy use and carbon emissions during asphalt production and installation.

Hilary Mercer, Shell Polymers senior vice president, called the move a “win-win” for the environment and the cracker plant project “by using materials that would otherwise have been plastic waste.”

More: U.S. energy secretary talks natural gas, climate in Beaver County

The company is now working to identify other possible uses for the technology across its other projects.

“We believe there are tremendous opportunities for combining asphalt and polymers to reduce both (carbon) emissions and plastic waste,” Mercer said.” "Governments, industry and the private sector can deploy this technology and deliver environmental benefits that were once unthinkable.”

This article originally appeared on Beaver County Times: Shell Polymers partners with recycling company to pave roads 


Shell’s Pension Dropped Alibaba, Sold Pfizer, J&J, and Merck Stock

By Ed LinNov. 13, 2021 

The pension fund of one of the largest energy companies in the world cut its investments in a Chinese online giant, and the U.S. pharmaceutical sector.

Shell Asset Management, which handles Royal Dutch Shell‘s pensions, exited Alibaba Group Holding (ticker: BABA), and slashed positions in Pfizer (PFE), Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), and Merck (MRK) in the third quarter. SAMco, as the subsidiary is known, disclosed the stock trades, among others, in a form it filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
 

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