http://www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2016/03/01/ikea-joins-advanced-bioeconomy-with-via-newlight-deal/?utm_content=bufferc6a8a&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

IKEA joins advanced bioeconomy via Newlight deal

March 1, 2016 | Jim Lane

In Sweden, IKEA and Newlight Technologies have entered into a supply,
collaboration, and technology license agreement that will supply IKEA with
Newlight’s AirCarbon and enable IKEA to produce AirCarbon thermoplastic
under a technology license.

Under the agreement, IKEA will purchase 50% of the material from Newlight’s
23,000 tonne per year plant in the United States, and subsequently IKEA has
exclusive rights in the home furnishings industry to use Newlight’s carbon
capture technology to convert bio-based greenhouse gases, first from biogas
and later from carbon dioxide, into AirCarbon thermoplastics for use in its
home furnishing products.

The technology

Newlight’s technology aims to transform the economics of PHA-based
plastics, since low yields and high production costs have kept PHA from
competing strongly with petroleum-based plastics.

The AirCarbon production process begins with concentrated methane-based
carbon emissions that would otherwise become a part of the air, rather than
fossil fuels that would otherwise remain underground, including air-bound
methane emissions generated from farms, water treatment plants, landfills,
and energy facilities.

Due to the high heat-trapping potential and superior thermodynamics of
methane compared to carbon dioxide, the company’s primary focus is on
sequestering methane-based greenhouse gases, which have over 20 times the
heat-trapping impact of carbon dioxide (20 carbon dioxide capture plants
would be needed to match the impact of 1 methane capture plant). Newlight
is now using the company’s patented, award-winning greenhouse
gas-to-plastic bioconversion technology to produce plastics from air and
methane-containing greenhouse gas emissions generated at a farm.

The Partnership

IKEA’s long-term ambition is for all the plastic material used in their
home furnishing products to be renewable or recycled material. The company
is starting with their home furnishing plastic products, representing about
40% of the total plastic volume used in the IKEA range.

Both the companies will work together to identify and select the low-cost
carbon sources and development of the technology to use a range of
renewable substrates, with a long-term goal to develop capacities up to 453
KTA or 1 Billion pounds per year. The AirCarbon plants are initially
intended to run using biogas from landfills as their sole carbon feedstock
inputs, with expansion into other AirCarbon feedstocks over time, such as
carbon dioxide.

The Newlight backstory

Over the course of 10 years of research and development, Newlight developed
a biotechnological process to produce a material called AirCarbon: a family
of high-performance polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA)-based thermoplastic
materials made from carbon emissions that are able to match the performance
of a range of oil-based plastics while out-competing on price. Following
commercialization in 2013, AirCarbon was named “Biomaterial of the Year” by
the Nova Institute in 2013, “one of the 100 most technologically
significant innovations of the year” by R&D Magazine in 2013, and 2014
“Innovation of the Year” by Popular Science.

Today, Newlight is working with over 60 Fortune 500 companies across 9
major market segments to launch AirCarbon products. Newlight’s focus today
is expanding production capacity, and the company is currently working to
expand to 50 million pounds per year capacity to meet demand.

Last year, Newlight signed a 20-year take-or-pay off-take agreement with
Vinmar International for 1 billion pounds of AirCarbon PHA — the first
cost-competitive, carbon-negative plastic that will be available at scale.
Made, by the way, from greenhouse gas and thin air. You can see it in
action here.

In 2014, Dell announced new sustainability initiatives including the
introduction of carbon-negative packaging, through a partnership with
Newlight Technologies, inventor and manufacturer of AirCarbon.

In May 2014, Sprint announced it would be one of the first companies to use
AirCarbon, a new carbon-negative material made from greenhouse gas, instead
of petroleum, to create plastic products. The material will be used in
black and pink cell phone cases for the iPhone 5 and iPhone 5s sold online
exclusively on Sprint.com. Sprint is the first telecommunications company
in the world to launch a carbon-negative product using AirCarbon.

In April 2014, Newlight Technologies, a company changing the way we think
about carbon emissions by using greenhouse gas as a high-value resource to
produce cost-effective, carbon-negative AirCarbon plastics, has
successfully completed a Series C financing round, raising $9.2 million
from both new and existing investors, and bringing the company’s total
capital raise to $18.8 million.

Reaction from the stakeholders

Minh Nguyen Hoang, Category Manager of Plastics at IKEA of Sweden says:
“IKEA wants to contribute to a transformational change in the industry and
to the development of plastics made from renewable sources. In line with
our sustainability goals, we are moving away from virgin fossil based
plastic materials in favor of plastic produced from renewable sources such
as biogas, sugar wastes, and other renewable carbon sources. We believe our
partnership with Newlight has the potential, once fully scaled, to be an
important component of our multi-pronged effort to provide IKEA’s customers
with affordable plastics products made from renewable resources.”

Added CEO of Newlight, Mark Herrema: “IKEA’s partnership with Newlight
marks an important shift in how the world can make materials: from fossil
fuels to captured carbon, from consumption to generation, from depletion to
restoration. IKEA is a leader in the concept of harnessing its operations
to improve the world, and we are proud to be a part of

that effort.”

The Bottom Line

This IKEA partnership is the real deal — big volumes from a product now
produced and sold at commercial-scale. With IKEA’s 333 stores in 28
countries and 771 million visitors and 1.9 billion online — the volumes
predicted in this news cycle are no laughing matter. Carbon negative indeed
is turning into an everyday reality.

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