 
                                Covestro Uses Innovative Recycling Process
PITTSBURGH, PA – February 15, 2016 – Materials manufacturer Covestro is testing an  innovative and environmentally friendly process for recycling saline  process wastewater in plastics production. A pilot plant for the process  at the Krefeld-Uerdingen site in Germany was opened on Friday by  Federal Minister for the Environment, Dr. Barbara Hendricks. The new  technology reduces the salt levels in waters such as the Rhine and  conserves potable water resources. It is being used in the production of  polycarbonate, a high-performance plastic required in many sectors,  including automotive engineering, electronics and medical technology.
  
  The German Federal Ministry for the Environment has  provided some EUR 740,000 in funding to support the project as an  outstanding example of how a closed-cycle approach can be put into  practice in industry. The total cost of investment is around EUR 3.7  million. 
  
  During the opening ceremony, Dr. Markus Steilemann,  Head of Innovation at Covestro, explained that by taking this step the  company is once again demonstrating its capacity and will to use new  processes to help conserve resources and protect the environment. “The  generous support from the federal government encourages us to remain  diligent in our efforts to develop sustainable technologies and  products.”
RELATED Lapolla's 4th Generation Spray Polyurethane Foam Provides Industry with a Green Future, Project to Develop Recyclable Polyurethane Foam Wins $10K Dow Sustainability Innovation Student Challenge Award , Spray Foam Manufacturer Demilec Awarded for Innovation in Plastics Recycling
 Helping Reinforce the Network Structure 
  
  Dr. Klaus Jaeger, site manager for the Covestro  plants in North-Rhine Westphalia (NRW), highlighted the huge importance  of material lifecycles for the company. “The new process reinforces our  network structure at the key Krefeld-Uerdingen site, as it benefits all  production operations here,” said the NRW boss.
  
  The current project at Covestro marks the first time  in Germany that saline industrial wastewater has been recycled at an  industrial pilot plant. Pretreated salt water such as this is usually  released into waterways, specifically the Rhine, which runs directly  along the site. Thanks to the new plant, some of this wastewater can now  be used in an electrolysis process to manufacture chlorine. Chlorine  itself is one of the key raw materials for producing polycarbonate and  other plastics. 
  
  Recycling in Chlorine Production
  
  The new process helps save up to 30,000 metric tons  of salt and 400,000 metric tons of fully desalinated water in  chlor-alkali electrolysis every year. That corresponds to the avoidance  of emissions totaling 6,200 metric tons of CO2  equivalents annually. Every hour, the process stops up to 70 cubic  meters of saline wastewater from being released into the Rhine, thereby  protecting a similar quantity of potable water resources.
  
  Covestro has already optimized chlor-alkali  electrolysis by using energy-saving processes. For example, the oxygen  depolarized cathode technology jointly developed by the company helps  reduce energy consumption by a further 30 percent compared to the  standard process. If all chlorine producers in Germany were to employ  this market-ready process, the country’s total electricity consumption  would be reduced by one percent. That roughly corresponds to the annual  energy consumption of a large city such as Cologne.
  
  Polycarbonate production has a long history at the  Krefeld-Uerdingen site, where Covestro employs approximately 1,100  people. Chemist Dr. Hermann Schnell discovered the polycarbonate  Makrolon® there in 1953. Industrial production of the material began  five years later, and Covestro continues to market it globally today.
  
  About Covestro: With 2014 sales of EUR 11.8 billion, Covestro is  among the world’s largest polymer companies. Business activities are  focused on the manufacture of high-tech polymer materials and the  development of innovative solutions for products used in many areas of  daily life. The main segments served are the automotive, electrical and  electronics, construction, and sports and leisure industries. Covestro,  formerly Bayer MaterialScience, has 30 production sites worldwide and  employs approximately 15,700 people (calculated as full-time  equivalents) at the end of September 2015.
Find more information at www.covestro.com.
  Follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/CovestroGroup
  
  Forward-Looking Statements: This release may contain  forward-looking statements based on current assumptions and forecasts  made by Covestro AG. Various known and unknown risks, uncertainties and  other factors could lead to material differences between the actual  future results, financial situation, development or performance of the  company and the estimates given here. These factors include those  discussed in Covestro’s and Bayer’s public reports which are available  on the Covestro website at www.covestro.com as well as on the Bayer website at www.bayer.com.  Covestro and Bayer assume no liability whatsoever to update these  forward-looking statements or to conform them to future events or  developments.
 
                         
					 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									