Artemis Water Strategy

Water resilience for a thirsty future

Jul 13 2010

Ecosphere’s Ozonix Deployed to Gulf, but not for Oil

Ecosphere Technologies’ agreement with Mid-Gulf Recovery Services has developed into a contract announced July 8th.

The contract stipulates two Ozonix mobile water treatment units will be deployed on barges carrying housing quarters, to purify grey and black water generated by the personnel deployed to clean portions of the gulf. One unit has been deployed, and the second is slated to deploy by July 22.

This is unexpected news indeed, and while I’m glad the personnel on the two barges won’t contribute to the environmental disaster via untreated grey or black water, I had hoped advanced technology would be deployed to directly address the oil spill itself.

However, Ecosphere may have just stumbled on a new opportunity: if Ozonix can be used to purify grey and blackwater for reuse, Ozonix could potentially be deployed in other humanitarian and military missions, remote oil and mining camps, and other personnel-heavy, water-starved situations. The UN could deploy Ozonix in Haiti to save money trucking water to IDP camps.

We’ll keep watching Ecosphere to see how the contract with Mid-Gulf progresses.

Written by Laura Shenkar · Categorized: News, On-site Water Treatment · Tagged: Ecosphere, mid-gulf recovery services, Oil Spill

Jun 28 2010

BlueTechs Await Permission to Deploy in Gulf, While Rome Burns

Controlled Burn of BP's Oil Spill
A fishing boat is dwarfed by smoke from burning oil / Photo: Deepwater Horizon Response on Flickr

Seven weeks after the explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil platform, oil slicks have inundated the shores of mainland United States. Traditional oil recovery methods have proved inept.

BP has collected only 25 million gallons of oil and water from the surface of the Gulf and burned 238,000 barrels into the atmosphere — leaving plenty of oil to suffocate marshes, turn beaches black and poison marine life. A normally optimistic friend of mine recently joked that BP had discovered an organic, biodegradable material to absorb oil: pelicans.

That cynicism is poisonous, but it is not without justification. With over 100,000 solutions proposed via a highly publicized suggestion line, BP, the US Government and sub-contractors have plenty of available, established technologies to choose from. And yet, from many accounts, the technology sits idle along the gulf, waiting for permission to deploy. [Read more…]

Written by Laura Shenkar · Categorized: Commentary, Energy, News, Produced Water · Tagged: abtech, BP, Ecosphere, oil, Oil Spill

Jun 24 2010

Advanced Technology Reaches the Gulf

BP Oil Spill Covers Gulf
BP Oil Spill Covers Gulf / Image: NASA and the MODIS Rapid Response Team

Another Artemis Top 50 Company is deploying their technology to the Gulf to aid clean up of the still growing BP oil spill.Ecosphere Technologies signed a letter-of-intent with Mid-Gulf Recovery Services, LLC to deploy Ecosphere’s Ozonix technology to clean up the “Gulf’s marshes and inland waterways,” according to Glen Smith, CEO of Mid-Gulf Recovery Services.

The Ozonix Deep Water Recovery Process, recently patent-pending, is “a non-chemical water treatment system specifically built for removing oil and chemicals from water.” It works by generating millions of “micro bubbles”, creating a “buoyancy blanket” that lifts oil rapidly to the surface of the gulf.

How Ozonix Helps in the Gulf
Ozonix increases the concentration of oil on the surface of the Gulf, simplifying oil recovery (Click to view larger)

By forcing oil to surface quickly, the oil has less time to spread as it rises. The increased concentration on the surface simplifies the process of extracting the oil from the water.

View a visual presentation of the process (pdf).

Ecosphere’s technology won the endorsement of Jean-Michel Cousteau, the famed ocean explorer and President of Ocean Futures Society: “Ecosphere has been providing its patented Ozonix technology to help major energy companies recycle their frac waters by eliminating chemical biocides. We must now use this same technology to help restore our seas and shores while protecting the habitats of the marine and wildlife of the Gulf Coast. Now is the time for action, action, action and this is technology that needs to be put to work immediately.”

Using air is obviously a more environmentally friendly solution than using potentially hazardous chemical dispersants. It’s refreshing to see modern technology finally deployed to the Gulf, however late it is in coming.

 

Written by Laura Shenkar · Categorized: Announcements, Energy, News, On-site Water Treatment, Produced Water, Technology · Tagged: BP, Deep Water, Ecosphere, NASA, oceans, Oil Spill

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