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Accurate Emissions Measurements Creating the Foundation for Successful CCUS Projects

Class VI Well Construction: Engineering the Subsurface for Permanent CO2 Storage Page 12











Danielle Piekarski
Tom Bryan
Katie Schroeder
Sylvain Riba and
Rajesh Gattupalli


David Andrew Taylor
As the industry navigates economic uncertainty, ambiguous policy frameworks and scrutiny around safety and scalability, one thing remains consistent: adaptability. It appears in different ways from project to project, but it is undoubtedly what keeps things moving forward. As workers pivot and shift projects from concept to execution, precision, performance and trust matter more than ever.
Across the CCUS landscape, three key forces are shaping progress: data, infrastructure and accountability. We can see that shift most clearly in how projects are taking shape. With more than 130 projects spanning capture, transport and storage strategies, there is no longer a single path forward. Developers are exploring a range of approaches, from onsite storage and pipeline networks to rail solutions and carbon transformation technologies. It is a reflection of both opportunity and reality, as projects adjust to what works best regionally and what makes sense within evolving regulations, as explored further in the market analysis in the page-8 feature, “Mapping the Market,” by Tom Bryan.
At the same time, the groundwork behind these projects is becoming more defined. Class VI wells were once viewed mainly as a regulatory hurdle, but are now critical to enabling long-term carbon storage. As more projects move forward, the focus is shifting toward building systems that are consistent, reliable and built to last, as detailed in the page-12 feature, “Class VI Well Construction: Engineering the Subsurface for Permanent CO2 Storage,” by Sylvain Riba and James Cron.
Another element that continues to come into focus is measurement. As projects move into engineering and execution, having a clear picture of emissions is no longer just “nice to have.” It is essential. Reliable, real-time data helps guide decisions, build confidence and keep projects on track. Read more in our page-16 feature, “Setting for Success,” by Rajesh Gattupalli.
A positive sign of adaptability is rethinking what CO2 can be. Technologies that convert captured CO2 into fuels, chemicals and materials are opening new possibilities, turning what was once seen only as a hurdle into something with real value. That shift is increasingly supported by evolving policy frameworks designed to scale carbon management solutions, as explored further in the page-19 feature, “Brazil’s CCUS Regulatory Strategy,” by David Andrew Taylor.
The path forward is not simple, but it is becoming clearer every day. It’s important to acknowledge that progress will not come from any single breakthrough. It will come from the industry’s ability to bring all the pieces of this puzzle together in a way that works technically, economically and at scale.
DANIELLE PIEKARSKI CONTENT MANAGER
Carbon Capture Magazine dpiekarski@bbiinternational.com
VOLUME 5 ISSUE 1
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Schroeder: Could you explain what the regulatory and legal landscape for CO2 pipelines looks like across the Midwest?
Buis: Well, you have two components. Parts of the country that don’t have the geological formations to store the carbon on site, and that’s the vast majority of ethanol plants. You really have to get to Illinois, Indiana or Ohio to reach the rock formations that allow for storage, or go west into North Dakota or Wyoming.
All the plants in between have to pipe or transport it in some manner. Pipelines are the most efficient and safest way to transport carbon, or just about any type of fuel. You don’t want it out there in trucks or rail where there are more safety concerns.
So those two components are moving on different tracks. Where you can store carbon on site, those projects are largely regulated at the federal level through EPA Class VI permitting. In some cases, like North Dakota, the state has primacy and can handle the approval process itself.
But for the areas that don’t have those formations, pipeline approvals are handled at the state level, and each state has its own set of rules. There’s no federal approval process for pipelines. That’s where a lot of the complexity comes in.
You can see that play out across the region. For example, North Dakota has approved both pipeline and storage projects, Minnesota has approved a short-line pipeline, Iowa has approved part of a route with additional segments still pending, while South Dakota has rejected projects multiple times. Nebraska has approved a pipeline as well, and that project is already operational. It’s really a patchwork of decisions.

Schroeder: Have you seen that landscape shift in recent years?
Buis: Yeah, early on, this whole issue got bogged down in rhetoric and concerns about what carbon is, what it can do and how it might impact local communities. A lot of that was based on fear rather than facts.
A lot of the early decisions and discussion centered around safety, but that’s largely been addressed. What we’re seeing now is a shift in the conversation. The real debate has moved more toward landowner rights and how those are balanced with building infrastructure.
In that regard, we are starting to see more positive movement. In Iowa, for example, what was a very controversial issue last year has started to shift. There’s now legislation being proposed that looks to address both landowner rights and the ability of companies to establish pipeline routes through the state.
So while the challenges are still there, the conversation is becoming more grounded in facts, and there’s more constructive dialogue around how to move these projects forward.
Listen to the full podcast at ethanolproducer.com/podcast/443
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has approved a permit for One Carbon Partnership to inject and permanently store CO2 at the Cardinal Ethanol facility in Randolph County, Indiana.
Under the permit, the project may inject up to 450,000 metric tons of CO2 annually over a 30-year period, totaling 13.5 million metric tons. The carbon will be stored in a deep geologic formation more than 3,000 feet underground, secured by a thick caprock layer designed to prevent upward migration.
The permit requires continuous monitoring during injection and for 50 years after operations conclude to ensure the CO2 remains contained and does not impact underground sources of drinking water. The approval follows a detailed technical review and public engagement process and is subject to a 30-day appeal period.
EPA officials said the project is expected to support local job creation and attract private investment to the region, reinforcing the role of carbon capture and storage in advancing industrial decarbonization.


Svante Technologies Inc. has acquired Calgary-based Carbon Alpha Corporation, adding a major bioenergy carbon capture and storage project and associated CO2 infrastructure to its portfolio.
The acquisition includes the North Star Bioenergy Carbon Capture and Storage project in Saskatchewan, developed in partnership with the Meadow Lake Tribal Council. Phase 1 is expected to capture up to 140,000 metric tons of CO2 annually from a forestry biomass cogeneration facility and store it in a nearby saline aquifer. The Meadow Lake Tribal Council will serve as a co-owner of the facility.
The deal also brings a regional CO2 pipeline and storage hub into Svante’s portfolio, supporting the company’s strategy to build and operate integrated carbon capture and storage systems. The hub is designed to serve additional biogenic CO2 emitters in the region.
Next steps include a front-end engineering design study and test well drilling, with a final investment decision anticipated in the first quarter of 2027.
Carbon Direct and C2X have partnered to advance the Beaver Lake Biofuels project in Louisiana, a facility designed to convert forestry residues into low-carbon biomethanol and permanent CO2 removals.
The project will produce approximately 550,000 metric tons of biomethanol annually while capturing and storing about 1 million metric tons of CO2 each year. Located at the former International Paper Pineville Mill site, it repurposes existing industrial infrastructure and has secured a 3.6 millionmetric-ton carbon removal agreement with Microsoft.
Carbon Direct will provide scientific and carbon market expertise to support measurement, reporting and verification, while also leading market development for carbon removal credits. A final investment decision is expected in 2026, with operations targeted to begin in 2029.

The U.S. Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service have released proposed regulations for the 45Z clean fuel production tax credit, providing new guidance on eligibility, emissions calculations and credit values.
The proposal outlines requirements for qualifying fuels, including lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions thresholds, feedstock sourcing and registration criteria. It also confirms the 45Z credit cannot be combined with the 45Q carbon capture, utilization and storage credit. Credit values vary based on fuel type and compliance with labor requirements, with adjustments for inflation.
The regulations eliminate indirect land use change emissions from lifecycle calculations beginning in 2026 and introduce updated methodologies for determining emissions rates using federal models. A 60-day public comment period will follow publication, with a public hearing scheduled for May.
Industry groups welcomed the proposal as a step toward greater clarity, while noting that additional guidance is needed on emissions modeling, feedstock tracking and implementation details.


NEG8 Carbon has launched an engineering study with Prochem Engineering to develop Ireland’s first large-scale direct air capture (DAC) system, marking the initial phase of its DAC program.
The first module, to be built at the company’s headquarters in Waterford, is designed to capture 50 metric tons of CO2 annually. The project advances NEG8 Carbon’s electrostatic DAC technology, which captures CO2 from ambient air for permanent storage or conversion into products such as sustainable aviation fuel.
Company officials said the project represents a key step toward commercial deployment, demonstrating a scalable and cost-effective approach to engineered carbon removal while supporting broader net-zero and negative emissions goals.
ABB has introduced an integrated gas analyzer package for carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) applications, combining multiple technologies into a single system for realtime CO2 impurity detection and quality monitoring.
The solution integrates ABB’s Sensi+ laser gas analyzer, GCP100 process gas chromatograph and ACF5000 FTIR system to measure trace impurities and support CO2 stream quality management across the value chain. Designed for industries such as cement, refining, bioenergy and power generation, the system helps protect infrastructure and meet strict purity requirements.
Delivered as a modular, turnkey analyzer package, the system is intended to reduce engineering complexity and improve operational efficiency. ABB officials said continuous monitoring can help operators avoid issues such as corrosion, reduced compressibility and pipeline rejection while maintaining compliance.



Comprehensive data from Ethanol Producer Magazine’s U.S. and Canada Fuel Ethanol Plant Map reveals a rapidly evolving carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) landscape, with more than 130 projects spanning multiple capture, transport and storage pathways.
By Tom Bryan
The latest edition of Ethanol Producer Magazine’s U.S. & Canada Fuel Ethanol Plant Map includes comprehensive data on carbon capture, utilization and sequestration (CCUS)—an umbrella term that encompasses all types of biogenic CO2 capture from ethanol plants.
The data is broken down into seven distinct types of CCUS activity, including four sequestration subsets and three utilization subsets. The utilization subsets include merchant capture (MERCH)—typically defined by overthe-fence CO2 processing for conventional markets, often by decades-old arrangement; carbon capture and transformation (CCT)— novel efforts to convert CO2 into biobased fuels and chemicals; and enhanced oil recovery (EOR), sometimes considered a hybrid of CO2 utilization and storage.
The sequestration subsets include onsite carbon capture and storage (OCCS)—sequestration carried out at or near ethanol plant property (i.e., within relative proximity to the source, sometimes involving short pipelines); pipeline carbon capture and storage (PCCS); rail carbon capture and storage (RCCS)—often referred to as “carbon by rail;” and intermodal carbon capture and storage (ICCS), a catchall term for proposed operations pursuing alternative or multifaceted CO2 delivery methods such as truck, rail, barge, or combinations thereof.
The commissioning of the Trailblazer has, in fact, made Nebraska the top source of sequestered ethanol plant CO2—with at least eight plants on the network at press time.
The CCUS data is further broken down by project status, simply placing each CCUS project into one of two binary categories: operational or planned. Note: the actual data (not included in this story) includes asterisks next to more than 50 planned PCCS projects with known plans, previous or deferred, to join Summit Carbon Solutions’ proposed multi-state pipeline, which recently lost its permit approvals to sequester CO2 deep underground in North Dakota.
While the U.S. ethanol industry has been known to have as many as 60 ethanol plants capturing CO2 for conventional commercial markets—food, beverage, dry ice, etc.—Ethanol Producer Magazine currently identifies 51 such operations. Notably, nine of the 51 MERCH facilities on the map have previous or deferred plans to convert to PCCS (if and when associated carrier pipelines become operational). The facilities awaiting PCCS are predominantly in Iowa, Minnesota and South Dakota.
Among transformation plays, Kansas Ethanol in Lyons, Kansas, is in the early operational stages of CO2 transformation aimed at low-carbon synthetic base lubricating oils and jet fuel. Archer Daniels Midland-Decatur, already an operational OCCS facility, is working with a company to divert a portion of its biogenic CO2 to CCT. These types of CCUS conversions, or stream splits, are becoming more common. Two MERCH facilities, one in the U.S. and another in Canada, are planning to convert to CCT when the timing is right. Others with CCT pursuits include Red River Energy in Rosholt, South Dakota, Adkins Energy, in Lena, Illinois, and Greenfield Global in Varennes, Quebec—each exploring concepts and technologies related to converting CO2 into green methanol or related maritime fuels.
Planned CCUS development remains concentrated in a handful of states, with Iowa, South Dakota and Minnesota leading in future project potential.
These projects span seven distinct categories, including three utilization pathways and four sequestration pathways.
Perhaps the most compelling data point on the map is that 18 ethanol plants are now involved in, or actively planning, onsite carbon capture and sequestration. As of mid-March, there were three active, permitted OCCS operations and 15 others in the planning stages. The operational OCCS facilities include two North Dakota plants—Blue Flint Ethanol and Gevo North Dakota—along with Archer Daniels Midland-Decatur (Illinois). Plus, Cardinal Ethanol in Union City, Indiana, secured its Class VI permitting for CO2 sequestration on March 3.
Along with Cardinal Ethanol, other planned, under development and soon-to-commission OCCS facilities include Aemetis, Front Range Energy, Alto Ingredients, Marquis Energy, Big River Resources-Galva, One Earth Energy, PureField Ingredients, The Andersons-Clymers, Western Plains Energy and Iroquois Bio-Energy.
Due to the large number of facilities still waiting on the fate of the Summit Carbon Solutions’ pipeline, the largest overall category of CCUS activity remains pipeline-related carbon capture, with 67 facilities across the U.S. and Canada associated with PCCS—more than 50 with now uncertain commitments to Summit. Three related PCCS projects are planned by Carbon America in northeastern Colorado and western Nebraska, and 13 PCCS facilities are on, or are planning to join, Tallgrass’ now operational Trailblazer pipeline. The commissioning of the Trailblazer has, in fact, made Nebraska the top source of sequestered ethanol plant CO2—with at least eight plants on the network at press time.
There is currently one planned carbon by rail (RCCS) project in the U.S., and another categorized as intermodal (ICCS). Midwest Renewable Energy, a small ethanol plant in Southerland, Nebraska, for example, is proposing to rail its CO2 to a sequestration site. Likewise, a facility on the West Coast, Pelican Renewables, has previously floated an intermodal rail/barge CO2 concept, and at least one Upper Midwest ethanol producer is exploring the idea of trucking its CO2 to a permitted storage site operated by a sister company.
These two categories—RCCS and ICCS—are likely to become more relevant in the future as ethanol producers entertain alternative means of CO2 transport, for both sequestration and utilization, if pipelines continue to face regulatory barriers and landowner opposition.
When it comes to the operational OCCS, PCCS, EOR and CCT facilities in the U.S.—14 in total—Nebraska leads the way with eight PCCS ethanol plants on the Trailblazer pipeline in mid-March. No other state has more than three operational ethanol plant sequestration or utilization operations (excluding MERCH operations). Kansas has three active operations, two directing their CO2 to EOR and a third facility in the initial stages of commercial-scale CCT. North Dakota leads the way in onsite sequestration, with two ethanol plants holding Class VI-permitted OCCS operations and actively sequestering. Illinois has one active, Class VI-permitted OCCS operation in ADM. And, as previously mentioned, Cardinal Ethanol recently obtained its own Class VI permit to pursue onsite or nearby CO2 sequestration.

Class VI wells are the regulatory and engineering backbone of large-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects in the United States. As deployment accelerates, the ability to inject and permanently contain CO2 in deep saline formations has become central to project feasibility, regulatory approval and long-term performance.
By Sylvain Riba and James Cron
As momentum accelerates across the U.S. for large-scale carbon capture and sequestration (CCS), Class VI wells have emerged as the regulatory backbone enabling long-term, verifiable storage of CO2 in deep saline formations. Whether developed by power producers, midstream operators, industrial emitters, or independent storage providers, every project ultimately converges on a single question: Can CO2 be injected and permanently contained in the subsurface with high integrity and low risk?
Class VI well construction is the proving ground where geology, engineering, and regulatory design intersect. The subsurface may define the storage resource, but the wellbore is the engineered conduit that assures containment. The economic driver—45Q tax credits—relies on demonstrable storage permanence, making well design and construction central to project bankability.
Class VI wells resemble high spec oil and gas
disposal wells, but with stricter requirements for cement placement, metallurgy, and monitoring. This article provides a technical roadmap for Class VI well construction, grounded in U.S. regulatory requirements and engineering best practices, and focused solely on the infrastructure required to store CO2 safely and permanently.
Regulatory Foundation:
The Class VI Framework
Class VI wells fall under the EPA’s Underground Injection Control (UIC) program and exist for one purpose: to protect Underground Sources of Drinking Water (USDWs) from endangerment. The regulatory framework requires operators to prevent fluid migration, demonstrate mechanical integrity, maintain continuous monitoring and operate within enforceable pressure limits. Class VI permits require deep integration of site characterization, risk evaluation, monitoring design, and well construction. While the submittals can span thousands of pages, the wellbore remains the key engineered barrier for demonstrating containment.



1. Conductor: 20" x 0.375" H-40, driven to 100'
2. Surface Casing: 13-3/8" 54.5# J-55 BTC set at 1,500' in a 17-1/2" hole. Cement to Surface.
3. 7" DV Tool w/ Packer at 3,000'
a) 1st Stage cement from 2,999' - 4,425' CO2 Resistant Cement b) 2nd Stage cement from 0' - 2,999' 35/65 POZ
4. Tubing & Annulus Sensors (Press / Temp) in annulus along tubing set at 3,440'. 9.0 ppg brine.
5. Back pressure valve set at 3,400'.
6. Tubing: 4-1/2" 25Cr set to 3,410', 7" 25Cr Packer set at 3,470'
7. 4-1/2" 25Cr X-Nipple
8. Injection Perforations
9. Protection Casing:
a) 7", 26#, J-55, 25Cr80 set from 3,050' - 4,500' in an 8-1/2" Hole. b) 7", 26#, J-55, LTC set from 0 - 3,050' in an 8-1/2" Hole.
10. Total Depth: 4,500'
Well Architecture: Designing for Multi Decade CO2 Service
The core design principles for Class VI wells include:
1. Surface casing to protect USDWs
Surface casing must be set through the base of the lowermost USDW and cemented to the surface. This ensures isolation from the start and provides a fully bonded barrier between the wellbore and freshwater zones.
2. Long string casing cemented to surface
The long-string casing, also called the protection casing, is inside the surface casing, extends to the injection zone and must also be cemented to the surface. The CO2-resistant cement must provide zonal isolation for decades in a CO2 rich, potentially corrosive environment. In some instances, an intermediary casing may be required for geological reasons.
3. Centralization and verification
Centralizers are required to ensure proper placement of the casing and optimal cement sheath. After cementing, operators must verify quality through a series of diagnostics, which include cased hole logging and mechanical tests, and any deficiencies must be remedied before injection.
4. Tubing and packer injection configuration
Class VI requires injection through tubing and packer only, never directly down the long-string casing. The packer is set across a cemented interval, creating a stable, verifiable pressure envelope around the injection tubing and annulus (the space between the casing and borehole).
5. Annular monitoring and fluids
The annulus must contain a non-corrosive fluid and maintain a positive pressure differential relative to tubing. This is one of the most important early leak detection mechanisms in the system.
Stress Envelope, Materials and Corrosion Control
CO2—particularly wet CO2 once water is present—is corrosive to carbon steel. Class VI well design requires careful planning around:
1. Metallurgy
Depending on CO2 purity and water content, operators may choose CRA tubing (e.g., 13Cr), internal coatings or glass-reinforced epoxy liners.
Even trace water can trigger carbonic acid corrosion, making metallurgy selection fundamentally a materials science decision, not just a cost based one.
2. Cement chemistry
CO2 can carbonate conventional Portland cement, reducing durability. Mitigation measures include: silica-rich cement blends, pozzolanic systems, CO2-resistant additives, and alternative non-Portland cement formulations where needed.
The cement system must match temperature, pressure and formation mineralogy.
3. Mechanical loads
Long term injection can induce temperature cycling, pressure cycling and axial load variations. Casing design accounts for burst, collapse, tension and thermal expansion.
Class VI designs typically embed safety factors beyond oilfield norms because carbon storage is multi decadal and irreversible.
Monitoring and Safeguards: Early Detection by Design
Class VI wells must incorporate multiple, redundant monitoring pathways:
1. Annulus pressure surveillance
Continuous trending of annulus pressure and volume offers a sensitive indicator of packer or tubing leakage.
2. SCADA integration
High/low pressure alarms, rate monitoring, and automatic shut ins must be hard wired into real time supervisory control (SCADA) systems.
3. Mechanical Integrity Testing (MIT)
Operators are required to maintain internal MITs (pressure and resting of tubing and packer), as well as external MITs (annulus monitoring, cement evaluation and temperature logging).
Any anomaly triggers immediate investigation and potential cessation of injection.
4. Pre injection baseline logs
Before injection begins, the operator must establish a full pre injection baseline suite of cased hole logs, pressures, rates and geomechanical measurements—all of which become the reference for anomaly detection.
While actual execution varies by site, a typical Class VI well development roadmap includes:
1. Site screening and pre FEED: evaluations of pore pressure, stress state, confining system and more, as well as injectivity modeling.
2. Stratigraphic test well: coring of the planned upper and lower containment zones, as well as the reservoir, pressure tests and other analyses.
3. Final well construction design: drilling procedure creation, cement and metallurgy selection, centralization, procurement and MIT schedule.
4. Drilling and completion: surface casing, fiber optic cable and long-string placement, verification of cement quality, tubing and packer installation.
5. Commissioning: SCADA integration, data acquisition, readiness testing.
6. Operations and integrity management: continuous monitoring, periodic MITs, annulus trend analysis, and corrective action procedures and notification protocols.
While Class VI wells are technical assets, their deployment is ultimately driven by economics. Today, the most consequential incentive for deep saline CO2 storage is the 45Q tax credit, which—under current rules—provides:
• $85 per metric ton of CO2 securely stored in saline formations
• Available for 12 years of credit generation
• Transferable under IRA provisions, enabling monetization even by early stage developers
For storage developers, the value of a Class VI well is directly tied to:
1. Verified permanence
45Q credits are only issued for CO2 that is demonstrably injected and securely contained. Class VI wells and the associated monitoring/reporting framework are the mechanism through which containment is verified.
2. Bankability and capital access
Financial institutions increasingly require Class VI permits—or demonstrable progress toward them—before funding storage projects. The repeatability and rigor of well design is a large part of why Class VI wells are viewed as investable.
3. Reduced liability through engineering assurance
Durable metallurgy, CO2 resistant cement, full annular monitoring and SCADA integration all reduce the long term risk profile, protecting the revenue stream tied to 45Q.
Class VI wells are more than injection points—they are engineered systems built to guarantee containment over decades. In the emerging CO2 storage market, where 45Q is the central economic driver, well design directly determines project feasibility, regulatory acceptance and financial performance.
As the U.S. scales toward gigaton level storage, the industry’s best Class VI wells will look less like oilfield wells and more like precision engineered scientific instruments: monitored continuously, built for extreme durability and designed for permanence.
Authors: Sylvain Riba and James Cron, Geostock Sandia



By Rajesh Gattupalli

Digital measurement and integrated data systems are shaping the success of CCUS projects by improving emissions visibility, reducing risk and enabling more confident design, operation and investment decisions.
Industries face the challenge of reducing greenhouse gas emissions while maintaining energy security. Carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) is a key strategy to achieve both goals, particularly in hard to abate sectors. Successful CCUS relies on accurate, integrated emissions measurement. If emissions cannot be measured with confidence, it is difficult to design, size or operate a solution to reduce them.

For operators in refining, chemicals, hydrogen, ammonia, cement and other emissions intensive industries, this challenge is no longer theoretical. CCUS projects are moving from concept studies into front end engineering and execution, increasing the stakes around design assumptions, capital allocation, and operational readiness. Without reliable emissions data, projects could face inefficiencies, higher costs and reduced credibility among investors and regulators.
The impact of these risks is amplified when they surface late in project development. During permitting, financing or front-end engineering design, (FEED), discrepancies between estimated and actual emissions volumes can force scope changes or delays. What appears manageable on paper can quickly become a gating issue once real operational data is required. In practice, when addressed early, accurate measurement is a key factor in determining whether a project advances or stalls.
Accurate emissions management begins with infrastructure. Sensors, analyzers, transmitters and imaging systems collect physical information and provide the data needed to understand emissions behavior. The value of this infrastructure largely depends on how it is deployed and whether systems are connected.
At many existing facilities, measurement systems were not originally designed to support real time carbon decisions. Instruments may have been installed for safety or compliance purposes rather than continuous operational insight. As a result, significant blind spots remain in how emissions behave under changing operating conditions.
In many facilities, emissions data exist in silos. Some measurements are continuous, while others are inferred or manually calculated. Some emissions measurements are available daily, while others appear only in weekly, monthly or quarterly reports. This fragmentation limits the data’s usefulness. By the time variances appear in reports, the operating conditions that caused them may already be gone, making root cause analysis challenging.
When measurement is consistent and standardized across systems, emissions data becomes part of normal plant operations. Operators can see emissions alongside pressures, temperatures, flows and operating modes. Deviations stand out sooner, and cause and effect relationships become visible before they escalate into problems. Emissions shift from being a reporting output to an operational signal.
In facilities where emissions are visible alongside traditional process variables, operators begin to treat carbon like any other performance parameter. Unexpected increases prompt immediate questions: what changed, where and why? This shift in mindset is often the first step toward stabilizing both operations and emissions.
The full value of carbon measurement emerges when emissions data is available continuously rather than only at reporting intervals. Carbon dioxide emissions are directly linked to how a facility is run. Changes in throughput, unit cycling, maintenance activity, feedstock and operating conditions all influence emissions behavior. Yet many facilities still rely on averages that mask this variability.
Short term variability often matters more than long term averages. Hour to hour swings in throughput or unit operation can significantly affect capture system performance, compression requirements and downstream integration. When operators can see emissions as they happen, they can respond immediately, reducing fluctuation, improving maintenance planning and stabilizing operations over time.
Once measurement infrastructure is in place, emissions
monitoring becomes continuous and repeatable. Errors are reduced, and the burden of manual reconciliation is minimized. Operators notice drift earlier, engineers can trace changes back to specific conditions and managers gain visibility across units or sites rather than isolated snapshots. While this visibility does not eliminate uncertainty entirely, it reduces reliance on assumptions and enables more confident decision making.
Collecting data is only part of the solution. Emissions data must be validated, contextualized, and made usable by the people running the facility. Digital operations platforms can bring field measurements into a single view, reducing uncertainty and errors caused by disconnected systems. This improves confidence in both day to day operations and longer term investment planning.
For CCUS projects, usability is important. Capture design, operations and reporting often span multiple teams and external stakeholders, all of whom depend on consistent emissions data to make aligned decisions. When data is fragmented or poorly understood, misalignment increases risk.
Integrating emissions data is particularly challenging at brownfield sites, where years or decades of equipment upgrades and control system changes may have created complex and fragmented data environments. Differences in standards, calculation methods and manual data entry can introduce errors and undermine trust in the results.
A modern emissions management software solution helps address these challenges by centralizing data into a single platform. Information from digital monitoring devices, third party sensors and manual inputs can be consolidated, ensuring that teams work from the same dataset. Successful deployments focus first on reliability and transparency—ensuring operators and engineers understand where the data comes from, how it is calculated and when it should be questioned.
By standardizing calculations and automating data collection, digital operations reduce errors and improve timeliness. Emissions information becomes part of routine operations rather than a separate reporting exercise, supporting faster decisions and clearer communication across teams.
Carbon capture projects can go beyond capturing emissions, creating value through utilization, supplying stored carbon to others or integration into broader networks. Measurement and digital operations play a central role in evaluating these opportunities.
Whether utilization pathways are realistic depends heavily on measurement. Volume, purity, continuity, and variability all influence whether captured CO2 can be marketed, converted or transported economically. Many utilization concepts appear attractive on paper but prove challenging in practice when operational variability is considered.
One innovative example of this is Honeywell providing carbon capture technology to an Indiana energy company to help convert a former gasification plant into one of the nation’s first low-carbon hydrogen and ammonia facilities. By centralizing emissions data and using proven technology, the facility will produce 500,000 metric tons of ammonia fertilizer annually, demonstrating how integrated systems support smart decisions, operational efficiency and stakeholder confidence.
Monthly averages can mask downtime, turndown or instability that make downstream utilization impractical without additional buffering or conditioning. In some cases, a smaller but more consistent CO2 stream may be more valuable than a larger, more variable one. In others, modest operational changes can stabilize output enough to open new options.
By understanding carbon volume, quality and variability at a granular level, operators can determine early which pathways are viable and which are not. That early clarity prevents time and capital from being spent on options that were never feasible and allows teams to focus on solutions aligned with how their facilities operate.
Carbon capture technology will continue to advance, storage networks will expand and new utilization pathways will emerge. These developments matter, but one of the most important factors for success remains foundational: accurate measurement, connected systems and day-to-day visibility.
Facilities that invest in understanding their emissions gain more than compliance data. They gain control. They reduce uncertainty. They make better decisions about capture sizing, integration points and whether a facility is ready for CCUS at all. That insight allows project teams to move forward with confidence rather than assumptions.
Investing in accurate measurement infrastructure does involve upfront costs, which can be a barrier for some organizations. However, these investments often deliver long-term value through improved operational efficiency, reduced rework and lower risk of project delays or redesign. Established measurement technologies with proven operational performance can strengthen both project economics and competitive positioning as carbon reduction becomes increasingly important.
Before committing capital to capture technology, operators benefit from committing first to understanding how their facilities emit carbon. In today’s CCUS landscape, that clarity is often what separates projects that advance from those that stall.
Author: Rajesh Gattupalli President, Honeywell UOP
Climate Imperative

Brazil’s regulatory framework for carbon capture, utilization and storage is emerging as a critical component of the country’s strategy to decarbonize heavy industry. As global emissions continue to rise and natural sequestration processes prove insufficient, Brazil is developing a policy and regulatory approach aimed at addressing emissions from hard-to-abate sectors while maintaining industrial competitiveness.
By David Andrew Taylor
The global climate crisis has reached a critical juncture. The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has indicated that limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius requires global greenhouse gas emissions to peak before 2025 and be reduced by 43% by 2030. This goal has not been achieved. Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions increased from 6 billion metric tons in 1950 to 25 billion in 2000 and more than 41 billion projected for 2025. There are now approximately 3.4 trillion metric tons of CO2 in the atmosphere. Natural CO2 sequestration processes are too slow to address current emission levels. For example, around 50% of emitted CO2 is typically removed in 30 years by ocean absorption.
Hard-to-abate sectors account for more than 30% of global CO2 emissions, with heavy industry accounting for approximately 70% of industrial emissions. Brazil's industrial sector cannot decarbonize through conventional energy transition alo-
'Without carbon capture and storage or carbon capture, utilization and storage, these industrial facilities alone would render Brazil’s net-zero commitment impossible to achieve.'

ne. In 2023, Brazil's industrial sector emitted 91 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent. These emissions are derived largely from process-related CO2 inherently tied to chemical reactions in cement, steel, aluminum and chemical manufacturing, constraints that cannot be eliminated through electrification or fuel switching. Brazil's steel industry operates with 76% old blast furnace technology remaining operational through the 2030s. Cement production releases CO2 from limestone calcination, accounting for approximately 66% of total cement emissions. Without carbon capture and storage (CCS) or carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS), these industrial facilities alone would render Brazil's net-zero commitment impossible to achieve.
Brazil's regulatory response demonstrates an iterative approach. The current foundation rests on Federal Law No. 14.993/2024, while anticipated Bill 1.425/2022 would enhance this structure.
Federal Law No. 14.993/2024, enacted Oct. 8, 2024, establishes Brazil's current regulatory framework for CCS. The law vests regulatory authority in the National Agency of Petroleum, Gas and Biofuels, which oversees CCS operations through comprehensive authorization covering capture, transport and geological storage, with 30-year validity periods subject to renewal.
Operator obligations encompass secure CO2 storage implementation, identification and response to adverse events, maintenance of calibrated equipment and preservation of validated records. Monitoring extends throughout the authorization period and for a period determined by ANP following cessation of injection activities.
Bill 1.425/2022 would create a more comprehensi-
ve, specialized CCS framework. The bill received approval from the Mining and Energy Committee of the Brazilian National Congress on November 29, 2023, and awaits new rapporteur designation as of April 4, 2025. Upon enactment, it would supersede CCS provisions within Federal Law No. 14.993/2024.
The proposed structure establishes permanent storage activities through qualified grant terms for 30-year periods. The legislation designates ANP as the regulatory authority while creating the Storage Asset Manager (GAA), a private, nonprofit entity to monitor storage assets following operator obligations—a key enhancement.
Monitoring requirements mandate activities throughout the grant term and for up to 40 years following permanent cessation, with potential transfer to GAA for periods of 20 to 35 years. The bill establishes preferential access provisions prioritizing: decarbonization capacity; feasibility of capture, transport and storage; and project implementation capacity.
Federal Law 15.042/2024, enacted Dec. 11, 2024, established the Brazilian GHG Emissions Trading System (SBCE), creating Brazil's first mandatory carbon market. Facilities emitting more than 25,000 metric tons CO2 equivalent annually must purchase carbon credits, while those exceeding 10,000 metric tons face mandatory reporting. The system enables monetization through Article 6.4 mechanisms of the Paris Agreement.
Technical standardization has advanced through the Brazilian Technical Standards Association's March 2024 adoption of ISO 27914 for CO2 geological storage and ISO 27916 for enhanced oil recovery.
The updated 2024-26 "New Industry Brazil" action plan includes revised targets for 2026 to 2033 specifically focusing on industrial decarbonization innovations. These include CCUS and bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), with Brazilian sugar cane ethanol distilleries identifiable "low-hanging fruit" for BECCS deployment.
'Brazil’s regulatory framework for carbon capture, utilization and storage is emerging as a critical component of the country’s strategy to decarbonize heavy industry.'
Petrobras's proprietary HISEP technology will achieve operational deployment at the Mero field in 2028, supported by TechnipFMC's more than $1 billion integrated turnkey contract. This subsea processing system handles CO2-rich dense gas at pressures up to 2,000 meters below the waterline, eliminating energy-intensive topside compressors and increasing floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel efficiency.
These developments build upon Petrobras's 22 FPSOs in the Santos Basin pre-salt fields, each equipped with CO2 capture and reinjection systems. Operating at depths up to 7,000 meters below sea level, these systems manage extreme high-pressure conditions.
Petrobras achieved cumulative CO2 reinjection of 40.8 million tons by 2022 while maintaining emissions below 11 kilograms CO2 equivalent per barrel. The program envisions scaling to 60 million tons per year capacity by 2050. The pre-salt reservoirs offer exceptional storage potential, with engineering studies estimating capacity for more than 3.3 billion tons of CO2.
Brazil's CCUS deployment advances through the hub concept developed by the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative — a CEO-led consortium comprising BP, Chevron, CNPC, Eni, Equinor, ExxonMobil, Occidental, Petrobras, Repsol, Saudi Aramco, Shell and TotalEnergies. Eight CCUS hubs targeting Brazil's most carbon-intensive industries could collectively capture 88 million tons of CO2 annually while contributing $3.2 billion to GDP and creating 210,000 jobs. Petrobras is developing a pilot hub in Rio de Janeiro state to serve multiple industrial emitters, moving toward CCUS-as-a-service through CO2 capture certificates.
Exceptional geological storage potential is concentrated in the Campos depleted oil and gas fields and the Parana sedimentary basin. These formations possess capacity to store more than 12 billion metric tons of CO2, representing approximately 95% of Brazil's total domestic storage reserves.
Achieving 190 million tons annual capture—the theoretical maximum capacity—requires $58 billion capital investment, with approximately 25% necessitating government funding. Only half
of surveyed professionals consider this achievable, estimating only 25% probability by 2060. This represents merely 0.46% of current global annual emissions.
Despite the robust regulatory architecture and promising geological potential, the absence of targeted fiscal incentives creates a considerable financial constraint. Unlike the United States and Canada, which offer substantial tax credits including the enhanced 45Q credit (up to $180 per ton) and Canada's 37.5% CCUS investment tax credit—Brazil provides no comparable direct fiscal support for CCUS deployment, leaving private developers to absorb full capital costs.
Brazil's heavy industry assets average 18-20 years in age. These aging assets increase emissions while their depreciated costs make replacement economically unattractive.
Infrastructure gaps compound challenges. Brazil lacks dedicated CO2 transport networks, with pipeline construction costing approximately $42-$43 per meter per inch of diameter. Maritime CO2 shipping faces logistical and regulatory hurdles at required scale.
Petrobras $16.3 billion commitment to low-carbon initiatives within its $111 billion Business Plan 2025-29 forms a strong anchor, but scaling requires synchronized policy and regulatory action.
Brazil's regulatory strategy offers a pragmatic blueprint for industrial decarbonization. Federal Law No. 14.993/2024, complemented by anticipated Bill 1.425/2022 and SBCE, establishes a foundational framework recognizing CCUS as critical infrastructure. However, without financial incentives, infrastructure coordination and market mechanisms, the framework risks remaining aspirational. The ultimate measure depends on whether CCUS deployment achieves genuine long-term carbon removal rather than merely delaying emissions—determining whether regulatory leadership translates into sustained industrial competitiveness and meaningful climate impact.
References available upon request.
Author: David Andrew Taylor, Corporate Law Consultant
www.taylorlegalbusiness.com
Advanced Biofuels USA
507 North Bentz Street Frederick, MD 21701
Joanne Ivancic, Executive Director 301-644-1395
info@AdvancedBiofuelsUSA.org https://advancedbiofuelsusa.info
American Carbon Alliance 215 10th Street Suite 100
Des Moines, IA 50309
Tom Buis, CEO 515-423-0694
tbuis@americancarbonalliance.org americancarbonalliance.org
American Coalition for Ethanol 5000 South Broadband Lane Suite 224
Sioux Falls, SD 57108
Katie Muckenhirn, Vice President of Public Affairs 605-306-6107 kmuckenhirn@ethanol.org ethanol.org/
Amros Corporation 14006 Drakewood Drive Sugar Land, TX 77498
Vladimir G. Ingerman, Founder & CEO 281-240-0881 ingerman@amros.us amros.us
Biotech Applied Research 1535 FL-64
Suite 101
Avon Park, FL 33825
Zack Farr, COO 863-443-7283
z.farr@biotechappliedresearch.org biotechappliedresearch.org
Cooling Technology Institute (CTI) PO Box 681807 Houston, TX 77268
Jalene Fritz, Membership Committee 970-593-2434
jalenemf@gmail.com cti.org
ENERGYchange.com PO Box 24017 Guelph, ON N1E6V8
Canada
James Roszel, Administrator 519-767-2913
webmaster@energychange.com www.energychange.com
Farm Credit Services of America South 118th Street Omaha, NE 68137
Jessica Bernstien, Agribusiness Lending VP 701-499-2633
jess.bernstien@agcountry.com www.fcsamerica.com
Carbon Capture Technology
Bioenergy Carbon Capture

CapCO2 Solutions
20-32 Linden Street Queens, NY 11385
Jeff Bonar, CEO 561-212-0451
jeff@capco2.solutions www.capco2.solutions

Salof Limited Inc. 5141 I-35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744
sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com
Aequor Inc.
10054 Mesa Ridge Court #106 San Diego, CA 92121
Marilyn Bruno, CEO 858-255-7854 mbruno@aequorinc.com www.aequorinc.com
Greater Fort Dodge Growth Alliance 24 North 9th Street
Suite A
Fort Dodge, IA 50501
Jefferson Fosbender, Economic Development Director 515-227-7124
jefferson@greaterfortdodge.com www.greaterfortdodge.com
Hexas Biomass
900 Jefferson Street Southeast #1113 Olympia, WA 98501
Wendy Owens, Founder & CEO 360-890-0775 info@hexas.com www.hexas.com
Iowa Renewable Fuels Association 5550 Wild Rose Lane Suite 340 West Des Moines, IA 50266
Lisa Coffelt, Marketing Director 515-829-0478 lcoffelt@iowarfa.org www.iowarfa.org
Maryland Forestry Foundation 124 South Street Annapolis, MD 21401
Gary Allen, President 301-717-1579 gallenbay@gmail.com marylandforestryfoundation.org
Minnesota Bio-Fuels Association, Inc.
500 East Travelers Trail
Suite 600
Burnsville, MN 55337
Brian Werner, Executive Director 612-888-9138 contact@mnbiofuels.org mnbiofuels.org
Renewable Energy Institute 6705 Bancroft Woods Austin, TX 78729
Monty Goodell, Executive Director 832-758-0027
info@ CarbonCaptureAndSequestration.com carboncaptureandsequestration.com
Siouxland Energy Cooperative 3890 Garfield Avenue
Sioux Center, IA 51250
Leah Holverson, Land Manager 712-722-4904
leah@siouxlandenergy.com www.siouxlandenergy.com/
The New York Blower Company 7660 South Quincy Street Willowbrook, IL 60527
Ben Zastrow, Director of Marketing 630-794-5731 bzastrow@nyb.com www.nyb.com
USA BioEnergy 7440 East Pinnacle Peak Road Suite 140 Scottsdale, AZ 85255
Nick Andrews, CEO 602-909-6677
nick@bioenergy.com www.BioEnergy.com
Carbon Storage Solutions
31375 Great Western Drive Windsor, CO 80550
Dan Sanders, CEO/President 970-674-2910
drsanders@frontrangeenergy.com
Chief Ethanol Fuels, Inc. 4225 East South Street Hastings, NE 68901
Logan Yoder, Supply Chain Manager 402-460-3271
logan.yoder@chiefind.com chiefethanol.com
Clearview Sensing
2140 Green Meadows Drive Sealy, TX 77474
Jurgen Zach, Sensor Champion 832-436-8389
jzach@clearviewsensing.com leakspectrum.com
Haffner Energy Inc.
Greentown Labs
4200 San Jacinto Street Houston, TX 77004
Nathalie Ionesco, COO 713-297-1406
nathalie.ionesco@haffner-energy.com www.haffner-energy.com
HeartFoods Group, PBC
1155 North State Street Suite 110
Bellingham, WA 98225
Mark Buehrer, CEO 360-815-6476
markb@heartfoodsgroup.com heartfoods.co
Mercurius Biorefining
3190 Bay Road Ferndale, WA 98248
Eric Seck, Chief Operating Officer eric@mercuriusbiorefining.com mercuriusbiorefining.com
Nikua Training Center- Registered 501 (c) Non-Profit Organization 2397 Northwest Kings Boulevard #174 Corvallis, OR 97330
Daniel Shafer, CEO & Co-Director 541-224-6189 operations@nikua.org www.nikua.org
ONYM Group
115 Martin Street Adstock, QC G0N 1S0 Canada
Mustapha Ouyed, Cofounder & Executive VP 514-895-9592 mustapha.ouyed@groupeonym.com groupeonym.com/en
PCC Hydrogen Inc. 11361 Decimal Drive Louisville, KY 40299
Jeffrey Harrison, CTO 502-439-1784
jbharrison@pcchydrogen.com www.pcchydrogen.com
Permanente Corporation
4265 San Felipe Street Suite 1100 Houston, TX 77027
Daniel J. Seidner, President 713-485-0970
daniel@permanentecorp.com www.permanentecorp.com
Permanente Corporation 2121 Avenue of the Stars Suite 800 Los Angeles, CA 90067
Marc A. Seidner, CEO 310-203-5401
marc@permanentecorp.com www.permanentecorp.com
Yilkins PO Box 8210 Groningen 9728XA The Netherlands
Guy Penard, VP North America 978-394-4200 g.penard@yilkins.com yilkins.com/
Avnos, Inc.
6060 Center Drive 10th Floor
Los Angeles, CA 90045
Will Kain, Chief Executive Officer will@avnos.com www.avnos.com
Brentwood Industries, Inc.
500 Spring Ridge Drive Reading, PA 19610
Jason Hill, Marketing Specialist 610-347-8979
jason.hill@brentwoodindustries.com www.brentwoodindustries.com/ products/mass-transfer
Dalum Equipment
Sømarksvej 53 Søndersø 5471 Denmark
Kelly Fetherolf, VP Sales 818-391-7544
kelly@dalumequipment.com Dalumequipment.com
Eidon LLC
7808 Southeast 24th Street Mercer Island, WA 98040
Roger Johnson, Founder 206-391-5232 roger.j@eidonllc.com eidonllc.com
Moore Fans
800 South Missouri Avenue Marceline, MO 64658
Spencer Ward, Business Development 660-376-3575 spencer.ward@moorefans.com www.moorefans.com
Post-Combustion

AGC Chemicals Americas, Inc.
55 East Uwchlan Avenue Suite 201 Exton, PA 19341
Kristin Carlin, Marketing Manager 610-423-4335 kristin.carlin@agc.com www.agcchem.com



Munters Borgarfjordsgatan 16 Kista, Sweden 164 40 Danny Thierens, Sales Manager Carbon Capture (Europe & Africa) +32 470 24 50 41 danny.thierens@munters.com
Francesca Martinelli, Sales Excellence Manager Carbon Capture +39 393 292 0145
francesca.martinelli@munters.com
Scott Thron, Sales Manager Clean Technologies (Americas) 239-690-8404 scott.thron@munters.com www.munters.com

Nitto Denko 101 Metro Drive Suite 700 San Jose, CA 95110
Marcel Benz, Director of Business Development 760-277-7605 marcel.benz@nitto.com www.nitto.com/us/en/products/ etechnology

Salof Limited Inc. 5141 I-35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744 sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711 info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
Bright Renewables
Thermen 10 Enschede, Overijssel 7521 PS The Netherlands Tamarah Swensen, Marketing Manager 880-534-8088 pr@bright-renewables.com www.bright-renewables.com/
Capsol Technologies
Drammensveien 126 Thune Eureka Building, 7th Floor Oslo 0277 Norway
Johan Jungholm, Chief Business Development Officer +47 409 24 889 johan.jungholm@capsoltechnologies.com www.capsoltechnologies.com
Delta CleanTech Ltd. #500 550 6th Avenue Southwest Calgary, AB T2P 0S2 Canada
Jeff Allison, VP Business Development 306-530-6025 jallison@deltacleantech.com deltacleantech.com
Dürr CTS, Inc. 830 Prosper Street De Pere, WI 54115 Sales Department 800-558-5535 sales.amer@cts-durr.com www.cts-durr.com
Epcon Industrial Systems LP PO Box 7060 (17777 Interstate 45 S. Conroe, TX 77385) The Woodlands, TX 77387 Angie Anderson, Sales/Marketing 936-202-1227 angie@epconlp.com epconlp.com
Nuada 9 Michelin Road Newtownabbey, Antrim BT36 4PT United Kingdom
Stratos Stavrakakis, Business Development Manager +02890255044 e.stavrakakis@nuadaco2.com nuadaco2.com
Precision Combustion, Inc.
410 Sackett Point Road North Haven, CT 06473
Stewart Rosenberg, Business Development Leader 203 287-3700 srosenberg@pci.energy pci.energy
Post-Combustion continued
Sulzer 900 Threadneedle Street Suite 700 Houston, TX 77079
Sebastian Arango, Carbon Capture Sales & Applications Manager 832-589-4843 sebastian.arango@sulzer.com www.sulzer.com
Toshiba America Energy Systems 6623 West Washington Street West Allis, WI 53214
Laura Baumann, Director of Marketing 716-799-1080 laura.baumann@toshiba.com www.toshiba.com/taes
Valley Process Technologies 2483 9th Street North Whapeton, ND 58075
Ryan Brock, Account Manager 402-270-3603 ryan@valleyprocesstech.com
Mike Thummel, CEO/Owner 701-404-0941 mike@valleyprocesstech.com valleyprocesstech.com
XDH-energy
45 Oak Street Colorado Springs, CO 80906 Xavier Dhubert, Sr. Consultant 904-277-4090 xavier.dhubert@xdh-energy.com xdh-energy.com
Pre-Combustion

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711
info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
Anguil Environmental Systems 8855 North 55th Street Milwaukee, WI 53223
Hannah Pardee, Marketing Coordinator 414-365-6400 hannahp@anguil.com www.anguil.com

BKV Corporation 1200 17th Street Suite 2100 Denver, CO 80202 720-375-9680 info@bkvcorp.com www.bkv.com
Halliburton
3000 North Sam Houston Parkway East Houston, TX 77032
Robert Fleming, CCUS Segment Lead 303-308-4200 robert.fleming@halliburton.com www.Halliburton.com/LCS

Salof Limited Inc. 5141 I-35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744 sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711
info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO

United Lands Company, Inc. 522 North New Hampshire Street Suite B Covington, LA 70433
Brian Greffenius, Senior VP 985-893-4151 briang@unitedlandsco.com unitedlandsco.com

Vault 44.01 1125 17th Street Suite 1275
Denver, CO 80202
Hugh Caperton, Sr. Vice President of Development 713-930-4401
info@vault4401.com www.vault4401.com
Alpha Holdings LLC 402 North Division Street Carson City, NV 89703
Christopher Miller, Managing Member 775-338-0371 ah_llc@yahoo.com www.alphaholdingsllc.com
ARTi 2151 Dean Avenue Des Moines, IA 50317 Sales Team 515-495-5101 arti@arti.com
Renato Valverde, Carbon Analyst 515-495-5101 renato.valverde@arti.com
Bernardo del Campo, CEO 515-495-5101 bernardo.delcampo@arti.com www.arti.com
Atlas Copco Gas and Process 46 School Road Voorheesville, NY 12186
Onur Serin, Market Segment Manager, CCUS onur.serin@atlascopco.com www.atlascopco.com
BioInnovation Systems, LLC Rhode Island
Thomas-Anthony R. Viscione, Director of Business Development North America 401-236-5067 info@bioinnovation.systems www.bioinnovation.systems
Biomass Controls PBC 30A Crabtree Lane Woodstock, CT 06281
Jeff Hallowell, Founder 860-315-5735 jeff@biomasscontrols.com biomasscontrols.com
DigiKerma
13800 Coppermine Road Suite 115 Herndon, VA 20171
Irfan K. Ali, Founder & CEO 703-234-5562 info@digikerma.com carbonkerma.com
GECA Environnement 1480 Chemin du Club Nautique Lac Sergent, QC G0A 2J0 Canada
Suzanne Allaire, CEO 418-558-4762
suzanne.allaire@gecaenviro.com GECAenviro.com
Graves & Co. Consulting 1201 Louisiana Street Suite 2720 Houston, TX 77002
John L. Graves, President 713-650-0811 jgraves@gravesconsulting.us gravesconsulting.us
Greenedge 1876 23rd Street Southeast Bemidji, MN 56601
Aaron Poxleitner, Project Manager 218-556-0810 aaronp@greenedgeco.com greenedgeco.com
Insured Carbon, LLC 5900 Rowland Road Minnetonka, MN 55343
Dennis Daggett, Partner/Chief Risk Officer 952-746-4353 info@agricapgroup.com agricapgroup.com
PYRONEXUS, LLC 1701 River Run Suite 701 Fort Worth, TX 76107
Byron Biggs, CEO 817-632-5033 sales@pyronexusglobal.com pyronexusglobal.com
Swenson Technology 1000 Lumber Street Crete, IL 60417
Erick Neuman, Global Business Manager 708-587-2300 sales@swensontechnology.com swensontechnology.com
United Lands Company, Inc. 522 North New Hampshire Street Suite B Covington, LA 70433
Brian Greffenius, Senior VP 985-893-4151 briang@unitedlandsco.com unitedlandsco.com
Carbon Capture & Storage Summit
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com carboncapturestoragesummit.com
International Biomass Conference & Expo
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.biomassconference.com
International Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
June 2-4, 2026
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.fuelethanolworkshop.com

North American SAF Conference & Expo
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.safconference.com

Sustainable Fuels Summit
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.sustainablefuelssummit.com
Alternative Fuels & Chemicals Coalition 1200 G Street Northwest Suite 800 Washington, DC 20005
North American Biocarbon Conference
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.BiocarbonConference.com
Maas Companies Inc.
PO Box 7127
Rochester, MN 55902
Tyler Maas, Director of Sales & Marketing 507-285-1444 maas@maascompanies.com www.maascompanies.com
Business Plans
A.T. Kearney
227 West Monroe Street Chicago, IL 60606
Neal Walters, Partner 416-389-7266
lorinda.chang@kearney.com kearney.com
Modular Energy Solutions PO Box 2759
Santa Clara, CA 95055
Charles Nolan, President 408-483-5922
chucknln@sbcglobal.net www.modular-e.com
Carbon Intensity
Life Cycle Associates 884 Portola Road Suite A11
Portola Valley, CA 94028
Stefan Unnasch, Managing Director 650-461-9048 outreach@lifecycleassociates.com www.lifecycleassociates.com
Merjent, Inc. 1 Southeast Main Street Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669 angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
Environmental

NESTEC, inc. PO Box 125 222 East Main Street
Pen Argyl, PA 18072
Scott Brayton, Director of Sales 248-794-3701
sbrayton@nestecinc.com www.nestecinc.com
Burns & McDonnell 9400 Ward Parkway Kansas City, MO 64114
Ben Voran, Energy Business Partner 913-909-1835 bdvoran@burnsmcd.com burnsmcd.com/ccmagazine
Chiz Bros. Refractory & Insulation Specialists 2117 Lincoln Boulevard Elizabeth, PA 15037
Mark Rhoa, Jr., Vice President of Sales 412-384-5220 mrhoajr@chizbros.com www.chizbros.com
Dr. Ring Singh, Executive Vice President 202-922-0144 summer@altfuelchem.org www.altfuelchem.org
Industry Link
Sos. Stefan cel Mare 23 Bucharest, Sector 2 011736 Romania Beatrice Ene, Managing Director +40-722-764-802 beatrice.ene@industrylink.eu industrylink.eu
MarTech Systems, Inc.
7267 Chesapeake Drive Exmore, VA 23350
Loraine Huchler, President 609-865-8151 huchler@martechsystems.com martechsystems.com
Merjent, Inc.
1 Southeast Main Street Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669
angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
My Source Solution, LLC 18926 Southwest 17th Court Miramar, FL 33029
Ritu Linhart, CEO/President 305-812-8288 rlinhart@mysourcesolution.com mysourcesolution.com
Pinnacle Engineering, Inc. 11541 95th Avenue North Minneapolis, MN 55369
Steve Schleicher, Vice President 507-261-0918 steve@pineng.com www.pineng.com
Environmental continued
RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. 400 Post Avenue Suite 405 Westbury, NY 11590
Jessica Karras-Bailey, Principal 516-333-4526 bailey@rtpenv.com www.rtpenv.com
Skyven Technologies 4440 Spring Valley Road Farmers Branch, TX 75244
Jim Saccone, Sr. Vice President of Global Sales 214-494-1152 info@skyven.co www.skyven.co
TRC Environmental Corp. 207C Eisenhower Lane South Lombard, IL 60148
Daniel F. Grabowski, Project Director 312-533-2024
dgrabowski@trccompanies.com www.trccompanies.com
Trihydro Corporation 1252 Commerce Drive Laramie, WY 82070
Carly Sowecke, Senior Geologist/ Hydrogeologist 307-460-0831 csowecke@trihydro.com www.trihydro.com
Studies

ResourceWise
15720 Brixham Hill Avenue Suite 550 Charlotte, NC 28211
Angela Rockwell, Director of Marketing 803-269-7441 angela.rockwell@resourcewise.com resourcewise.com
Azura Associates International Inc. 490 Dutton Drive Unit C4 Waterloo, ON N2L 6H7 Canada
David Ellis, President & CEO 877-298-7288 info@azuraassociates.com azuraassociates.com
Benz Technology International, Inc. 2305 South Clarksville Road Clarksville, OH 45113
Gregory Thomas Benz, President 937-289-4504
g.benz@benz-tech.com www.benz-tech.com
Canadian Wood Waste Recycling
Business Group
#108 - 4301 B South Park Drive Suite 206
Stony Plain, AB T7Z 2A9
Canada
James A. Donaldson, CEO/SME Consultant 780-239-5445
jdonaldson@cdnwoodwasterecycling.ca cdnwoodwasterecycling.ca
Digester Doc 7835 West Mossy Cup Street Boise, ID 83709
Ian Rowland, Sales Representative 720-799-6505 ian@digesterdoc.com www.digesterdoc.com
DkS Engineering Consulting 12 Rodney Terrace Northborough, MA 01532
David Shum, Principal 774-258-2747
david_shum@post.harvard.edu www.linkedin.com/in/davidshum
Exponent 4580 Weaver Parkway Suite 100
Warrenville, IL 60555
Dr. Sean Dee, Principal Engineer 630-658-7543 sdee@exponent.com www.exponent.com
Isomer Project Group 1320 Hampton Avenue Ext. Suite 14 Greenville, SC 29601
RL Simpson, Managing Partner 864-565-9100
rl@isomer.group www.isomer.group
Merjent, Inc. 1 Southeast Main Street Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669 angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
Information Technology
Mapcon Technologies 2670 Fleur Drive Des Moines, IA 50321
Max Ervin, Corporate Solutions Manager 800-922-4336 mervin@mapcon.com www.mapcon.com
Geostock Sandia 10930 West Sam Houston Parkway North Suite 100 Houston, TX 77064
Sylvain Riba, President & CEO 346-314-4347
sylvain.riba@geostocksandia.com www.geostocksandia.com
CDRexperts Eduard-Grunow-Street 1 Bremen, Freie Hansestadt 28203 Germany
Elisabete Trindade Pedrosa, Founder and Expert +4915735738475 contact@cdrexperts.org cdrexperts.org
Halliburton
3000 North Sam Houston Parkway East Houston, TX 77032
Robert Fleming, CCUS Segment Lead 303-308-4200
robert.fleming@halliburton.com www.Halliburton.com/LCS
LEC Partners, Inc.
245 First Street Suite 1800 Cambridge, MA 02142
Jason White, CEO 617-444-8750 info@lec-exec.com lee-enterprises.com
Merjent, Inc. 1 Southeast Main Street Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414 Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer
612-746-3669 angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
Smart Strategies LLC
236 East 81st Street, Floor 2 New York, NY 10028
Nelson Garcez, CEO 646-594-5399
nelson.garcez@smartstrat.com www.smartstrat.com
Valuation and Assets Services, LLC 2108 Carroll Creek View Frederick, MD 21702
K. Boison, Principal 301-646-4119
projects@valuationandassets.com www.valuationandassets.com
Regulatory
Christianson CPA & Consultants
302 Southwest Fifth Street Willmar, MN 56201
Jamey Cline, Partner 573-680-6499
jcline@christiansoncpa.com www.christiansoncpa.com/
WAEES
3215 South Providence Road Suite 3
Columbia, MO 65203
John Kruse, Managing Principal 573-228-9842
jkruse@waees-llc.com www.waees-llc.com
Safety

Knobelsdorff
25701 370th Street Goodhue, MN 55027
Megan Ramaker, Director of Marketing 507-732-7610
meganr@keway.com knobelsdorffenterprises.com
Fagus GreCon Inc. 648 Griffith Road Suite A Charlotte, NC 28217
Attila Madarasz, CEO 704-315-2736
amadarasz@grecon.us www.fagus-grecon.com/en-us/ industrial-fire-protection
HEMCO Corporation
711 South Powell Road Independence, MO 64056
Jerry G. Schwarz, Marketing 816-796-2900
jerry.schwarz@hemcocorp.com hemcocorp.com
IEP Technologies 417-1 South Street
Marlborough, MA 01752
Harland Conners, Marketing Specialist 855-793-3949
harland.conners@hoerbiger.com ieptechnologies.com
Northern Crops Institute
1300 18th Street North Fargo, ND 58102
Casey Peterson, Program Development Manager 701-231-4250
casey.peterson@ndsu.edu www.northern-crops.com

Carbon Capture & Storage Jobs
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com carboncapturemagazine.com/jobs

Pro Maintenance, Inc.
PO Box 575
10 Michigan Street Northeast Hutchinson, MN 55350
Kevin Maroney, Sales Specialist
320-552-5604
manderson@promaintenanceinc.com
Pro Maintenance, Inc., Project Coordinator 320-587-3135
manderson@promaintenanceinc.com promaintenanceinc.com
Heitman Architects
555 West Pierce Road Suite 130 Itasca, IL 60143
Paul Heitman, Director 630-773-3551 pheitman@heitmanarchitects.com www.heitmanarchitects.com
Buildings-Modular
Interstates, Inc.
1400 7th Avenue Northeast Sioux Center, IA 51250
Tyler Drenkow, Senior Business Development Representative 712-722-1662 tyler.drenkow@interstates.com www.interstates.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711 info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
Advanced Cryogenics, Ltd.
PO Box 419 160 Indian Mound Trail Tavernier, FL 33070
Sam A. Rushing, President 305-852-2597 rushing@terranova.net www.carbondioxideconsultants.com
Pelican Energy Consultants 4099 Highway 190 East Service Road Covington, LA 70433
Ed Covington, Vice President of Strategy & Markets 985-871-4200 ed.covington@pelicanenergy.com pelicanenergy.com
TEMS Inc. PO Box 64546 RPO Como Lake Coquitlam, BC V3J 7V7
Canada
Paul Tinari, CEO 604-760-5088 tinarip@yahoo.com tinari3d.ca
Commodity Talent LLC 149 Terhune Road Princeton, NJ 08540
George Stein, Managing Director 917-545-9850 ghstein@commoditytalent.com www.CommodityTalent.com
Kincannon & Reed 1019 Quince Road Harlan, IA 51537
Gary Weihs, Managing Partner 712-304-7334 gweihs@krsearch.com www.krsearch.com/
Interstates, Inc. 1400 7th Avenue Northeast Sioux Center, IA 51250
Tyler Drenkow, Senior Business Development Representative 712-722-1662
tyler.drenkow@interstates.com www.interstates.com
Evergreen Engineering®, Inc. 1740 Willow Creek Circle Eugene, OR 97402
Aaron Edewards, Business Development Director 541-484-4771
aedewards@eeeug.com evergreenengineering.com
Gregersen Structural Engineering, Inc. 175 Blackfoot Street Mesquite, NV 89027
Max A. Gregersen, Principal Structural-Seismic Engineer 385-232-1747 max@gsestructural.com www.gsestructural.com
ICM, Inc. PO Box 397 310 North First Street Colwich, KS 67030
Adriana Albornoz, Director of Marketing & Communications 316-796-0900
adriana.albornoz@icminc.com icminc.com
Olson Search International, Inc. PO Box 3468
Boulder, CO 80307
Jon Olson, President 800-985-5191 jon@olsonsearch.com olsonsearch.com
KFI Engineers
670 County Road B West St. Paul, MN 55113
Chrissy McNamara, Marketing & Business Development Manager 651-771-0880 cmmcnamara@kfi-eng.com
Dave Jansa, Director of Marketing & Business Development 651-771-0880 dmjansa@kfi-eng.com kfi-eng.com
Mid-South Engineering Co. 1658 Malvern Avenue Hot Springs, AR 71901 Chris Brown, President 501-321-2276 chris.brown@mseco.com www.mseco.com
R.C. Costello & Assoc., Inc. 1611 South Pacific Coast Highway Suite 302 Redondo Beach, CA 90277
Rocky Costello, President 310-792-5870 crosenthal@rccostello.com www.rccostello.com
TTUS Inc. 1457 Ammons Street Suite 107 Lakewood, CO 80214
Binh Le, General Manager 402-805-2968 binh.le@ttusinc.com ttusinc.com
Uzelac Industries Inc. N45W22900 Lindsay Road Pewaukee, WI 53072
Mia Ivetic, Marketing Manager 414-529-0240 mia@uzelacind.com uzelacind.com
Interstates, Inc.
1400 7th Avenue Northeast Sioux Center, IA 51250
Tyler Drenkow, Senior Business Development Representative 712-722-1662
tyler.drenkow@interstates.com www.interstates.com
EPC

Burns & McDonnell
9400 Ward Parkway Kansas City, MO 64114
Ben Voran, Energy Business Partner 913-909-1835 bdvoran@burnsmcd.com burnsmcd.com/ccmagazine

Knobelsdorff 25701 370th Street Goodhue, MN 55027
Megan Ramaker, Director of Marketing 507-732-7610 meganr@keway.com knobelsdorffenterprises.com

Mead & Hunt
6737 West Washington Street Suite 3500 Milwaukee, WI 53214
Matt Quinn, Energy Project Developer 585-216-7076 matt.quinn@meadhunt.com meadhunt.com/markets/renewableenergy
Saulsbury Industries
2951 East Interstate 20 Odessa, TX 79766
Savanah Cantleberry, Savanah Cantleberry 432-366-3686 scantleberry@saulsbury.com www.saulsbury.com

Vista Projects 330-4000 Fourth Street Southeast Calgary, AB T2G 2W3
Canada
Leslie Cassidy, Business Development 403-255-3455
leslie.cassidy@vistaprojects.com www.vistaprojects.com
CL Construction 2700 Fletcher Avenue Lincoln, NE 68504
Adam McLaughlin, Marketing Specialist 402-440-2212
adamm@clnebraska.com
Christopher Wittstruck, Director of Millwright 402-440-2212 chrisw@clnebraska.com CLNebraska.com
Fagen, Inc.
501 West Highway 212 Granite Falls, MN 56241
Will Stark, Vice President Business Development 507-829-7051 wstark@fageninc.com www.fageninc.com
Obsidian Engineering
500, 435 4th Avenue Southwest Calgary, AB T2P 3A8
Canada
Jeremy Zhao, Process Engineer 403-891-8650
jeremy.zhao@obsidianeng.ca www.obsidianeng.ca
Roeslein 9200 Watson Road Suite 200 St. Louis, MO 63126
John Demoulin, Vice President of Business Development & Marketing 314-729-0055 sales@roeslein.com roeslein.com
Stark Tech 2100 Wehrle Drive Buffalo, NY 14221
Rachel Corsaro, Marketing & Events Specialist 716-693-4490 corsaror@starktech.com www.starktech.com

Linde
7000 High Grove Boulevard Burr Ridge, IL 60527
Wladimir Sarmiento-Darkin, Director, National Business Development 480-784-4111
wladimir.sarmiento-darkin@linde.com www.lindeus.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711
info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
HYCO1
15403 Vantage Parkway East Houston, TX 77032
Tim Lozano, Director, Marketing 281-433-8557 marketing@hyco1.com hyco1.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711 info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
DeWall Industrial Technologies 161 Bridgepoint Drive South St. Paul, MN 55075
Caleb Wall, Account Manager 651-263-1435 caleb@dewallindustrial.com www.dewallindustrial.com/products
Tubacero
Vicente Guerrero 3729 Nte. Monterrey, Nuevo León 64500
Mexico
Arturo Marquez, Export Manager +52-81-8305-5536 amarquez@tubacero.com www.tubacero.com

Plant Construction Knobelsdorff 25701 370th Street
Goodhue, MN 55027
Megan Ramaker, Director of Marketing 507-732-7610 meganr@keway.com knobelsdorffenterprises.com

Salof Limited Inc. 5141 I-35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744
sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711
info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
All-Trades Industrial Group, LLC 26099 Fort Circle Bay 103 Valley, NE 68064
Rob Horst, President 402-378-8881 rob.horst@all-trades.us all-trades.us
Barnhart Crane & Rigging 3604 West Hovland Drive Sioux Falls, SD 57107
Bill Vyhlidal, Business Development 712-522-0029
bvyhlidal@barnhartcrane.com www.barnhartcrane.com
Cambridge Pro Fab Inc. 84 Shaver Street
Brantford, ON N3S 0H4 Canada
Jim Hodgins, Sales 519-998-5613
jhodgins@cambridgeprofab.com www.cambridgeprofab.com
Engineering/Construction continued
CR Manufacturing
3724 Westgate Road
Grand Island, NE 68803
Chris Whiting, Sales Manager 888-461-7040
chrisw@cr-mfg.com www.cr-mfg.com
Fischer Group Stainless Steel Tubing 547 Devonshire Road Windsor, ON N8Y 2L6
Canada
Joe McLinden, Sales ManagerNorth America 519-819-9308 jmclinden@fischerca.com www.fischerca.com/
INTEC Engineering GmbH
John-Deere-Strasse 43 Bruchsal, Baden-Wuerttemberg 76646
Germany
Christian Daniel, Key Account Manager +49-7251-93243-0 info@intec-energy.de www.intec-energy.de
Jenike & Johanson
400 Business Park Drive Tyngsboro, MA 01879
Esin Sparrow, Marketing Manager 978-649-3300 esparrow@jenike.com www.jenike.com
Liquidmetal Industrial Solutions
6207 Jim Snow Way Chattanooga, TN 37421
Jonathan Starling, Marketing Manager 423-541-3210
jstarling@lmce.solutions www.liquidmetal-coatings.com
MAP General Mechanical Contractors, Inc. 2600 Northwest River Road Sanford, MI 48657
Todd Peterson, Business Development Director 701-566-2784 todd.peterson@mapmechanical.com mapmechanical.com
Midwest Ironworks
200 1st Avenue Southeast Mapleton, ND 58059
Dustin Hartman, Sr. Project Manager 320-760-7579
dustinh@midwestironworks.com www.midwestironworks.com
Painters 570 Mitchell Road Glendale Heights, IL 60139
Samantha Kazumura, Marketing Manger 800-999-8715 info@paintersinc.com www.painters.com
Plaas Incorporated 1427 Old West Main Street Red Wing, MN 55066
Brian Holmstadt, Sales & Marketing 651-388-8881
brianh@plaasinc.com www.plaasinc.com
Southeastern Construction 1150 Pebbledale Road Mulberry, FL 33860
James Green, Business Development Manager 863-428-1511
jamesg@secm.co www.southeasternconst.com
Strobel Companies 106 South Green Street Clarks, NE 68628
Larry Myers, Client Development 308-624-4999 lmyers@strobelenergy.com strobelenergy.com
Todd & Sargent, Inc. 2905 Southeast 5th Street Ames, IA 50010
Scott Sylvester, Vice President 515-956-4805 ssylvester@tsargent.com www.tsargent.com
Site Management
Direct Companies
3405 North Louise Avenue Sioux Falls, SD 57107
Kyle Davis, Marketing Associate 605-864-8472
kyle.davis@directcompanies.com directcompanies.com
Well Construction
Halliburton
3000 North Sam Houston Parkway East Houston, TX 77032
Robert Fleming, CCUS Segment Lead
303-308-4200
robert.fleming@halliburton.com www.Halliburton.com/LCS
Geostock Sandia 10930 West Sam Houston Parkway North Suite 100 Houston, TX 77064
Sylvain Riba, President & CEO 346-314-4347
sylvain.riba@geostocksandia.com www.geostocksandia.com
Facilities
Operational

BETE Fog Nozzle, LLC
50 Greenfield Street Greenfield, MA 01301
Customer Service 413-772-0846 sales@bete.com bete.com?utm_source=carbcapmag& utm_medium=website&utm_ content=directory

Pro Maintenance, Inc. PO Box 575 10 Michigan Street Northeast Hutchinson, MN 55350
Kevin Maroney, Sales Specialist
320-552-5604
manderson@promaintenanceinc.com
Pro Maintenance, Inc., Project Coordinator 320-587-3135
manderson@promaintenanceinc.com promaintenanceinc.com
SW Firefighting Foam & Equipment, LLC 25A Lone Pine Ridge Santa Fe, NM 87505
Casey Ryan, Manager 505-699-5068 cryan@swfirefightingfoam.com novacool.com
Verico Technology 230 Shaker Road Enfield, CT 06082
Brian Pahl, Sales Director 860-871-1200 bpahl@vericotechnology.com www.vericocontractcoating.com
Under Construction
American Energy Enterprises Inc. 33 Obtuse Rocks Road Brookfield, CT 06804
Christopher Brown, Chairman 203-313-8177
christopher@americanenergyenterprises.com americanenergyenterprises.com
FibreForm Wood Products, Inc. 2121 Avenue of the Stars Suite 800 Los Angeles, CA 90067
Marc A Seidner, CEO 310-203-5401
marc@FibreForm.com
FibreForm Wood Products, Inc. 4265 San Felipe Street Suite 1100 Houston, TX 77027
Daniel J. Seidner, President 713-485-0970
daniel@FibreForm.com
Attorneys
Husch Blackwell
3810 East Sunshine Street Suite 300 Springfield, MO 65809
Christopher Peterson, Partner 417-268-4057
chris.peterson@huschblackwell.com huschblackwell.com
Kutak Rock LLP 1650 Farnam Street Omaha, NE 68102
David Bracht, Attorney 402-346-6000
david.bracht@kutakrock.com www.kutakrock.com

Publications

Biodiesel Magazine
308 2nd Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385
service@bbiinternational.com biodieselmagazine.com

Biomass Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com biomassmagazine.com


Carbon Capture Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.carboncapturemagazine.com
SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 30

Ethanol Producer Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.ethanolproducer.com
SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 30
Low Carbon Fuels Coalition
980 Ninth Street 16th Floor
Sacramento, CA 95814
Graham Noyes, Managing Attorney 530-264-7157
graham@noyeslawcorp.com fuelandcarbonlaw.com



Pellet Mill Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com biomassmagazine.com/magazine








SAF Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com safmagazine.com
Biofuels International/ Bioenergy Insight 124 Middleton Road Morden, Surrey SM4 6RW United Kingdom
Tracy Whitehead, Marketing and Events Manager +44 20 8687 4138 tracy@woodcotemedia.com www.bioenergy-news.com
Websites
SAFPath
New York 11590
Sara Fletcher, Director info@safpath.com www.safpath.com
Select Domains PO Box 4068 Naples, ME 04055
Robert Fogg, Owner 207-650-9494 robertfogg@q-team.com www.facebook.com/profile. php?id=61557242306370
Enerquip Thermal Solutions 611 North Road Medford, WI 54451
Troy Weik, Sales & Channel Manager 833-516-6888 sales@enerquip.com www.enerquip.com
Oxidizers, Inc.
1731 Pomona Road Corona, CA 92880
Leah Zuercher, Field Project Facilitator & Field Technician 951-271-3990
leah@oxidizers.net oxidizers.net
ABB Inc.
3700 West Sam Houston Parkway South Houston, TX 77042
Teri Lesniak, Marketing Communications Manager 440-585-8751
teri.lesniak@us.abb.com www.abb.com
Indeck Power Equipment Company
1111 Willis Avenue Wheeling, IL 60090
Customer Service 847-541-8300
info@indeck-power.com indeck.com
Industrial Sales Solutions
3684 120th Court West Faribault, MN 55021
Jim Vogel, President 612-805-7646
jim.vogel@ind-sales.com www.ind-sales.com
SGS Beta
4985 Southwest 74th Court Miami, FL 33155 Customer Care 305-662-7760 info@betalabservices.com www.betalabservices.com
Summit Lubrication
9010 County Road 2120 Tyler, TX 75707
Sam Kennedy, Market Manager, Global Business Team, Gas Compressor & Turbine 903-805-3761
sam.kennedy@klsummit.com www.klsummit.com
Interstates, Inc.
1400 7th Avenue Northeast Sioux Center, IA 51250
Tyler Drenkow, Senior Business Development Representative 712-722-1662
tyler.drenkow@interstates.com www.interstates.com
Good Land Industrial LLC
N7441 Quiet Water Court New Lisbon, WI 53950
Jim Tassone, Owner 414-349-6664
jimt@goodlandind.com goodlandind.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711
info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
AMETEK Process Instruments
150 Freeport Road Pittsburgh, PA 15238 Customer Service 412-828-9040
sales.ametekpi@ametek.com www.amtekpi.com
Apex Measurement and Controls, LLC 13455 Garden Grove Houston, TX 77082
Ardis Bartle, Manager 713-446-1902 ardisbartle@apexmeasurement.com www.eleven13solutions.com
BioIntelligence Technologies Inc. 1335 King West Suite 250 Sherbrooke, QC J1J 2B8 Canada
Rosy Trimboli, Director of Business Support 800-820-4783
rtrimboli@biointelligence.com biointelligence.com
CO2SeQure
10777 Westheimer Street Suite 250
Houston, TX 77042
Mike Saunders, Business Development – Pipelines, CCUS, and Geothermal 713-742-3067
msaunders@microseismic.com www.microseismic.com
Interstates, Inc. 1400 7th Avenue Northeast Sioux Center, IA 51250
Tyler Drenkow, Senior Business Development Representative 712-722-1662
tyler.drenkow@interstates.com www.interstates.com
Iowa Central Fuel Testing Laboratory 1310 A Street West Fort Dodge, IA 50501
Donald Heck, Director 515-574-1259 fuels@iowafuellab.com ifl.iowacentral.edu
Optical Scientific Inc. 2 Metropolitan Court Suite 6 Gaithersburg, MD 20878
James William Shinkle, Business Development 312-237-0375 jwshinkle@opticalscientific.com www.opticalscientific.com
Quveon Karl Fischer Reagents: Made in the USA 599 Raleigh Road Suite C Henderson, NC 27536
Marlene Stewart, Sales 818-292-8612
marlene.stewart@quveon.com www.quveon.com
Sensor Electronics Corporation 12370 Creek View Avenue Savage, MN 55378
Sarah Robb, Marketing Manager 952-938-9486 srobb@sensorelectronic.com www.sensorelectronics.com
SRI Instruments 20720 Earl Street Torrance, CA 90503
SRI Instruments, CEO 310-214-5092 hugh@srigc.com www.srigc.com

Valves AGC Chemicals Americas, Inc.
55 East Uwchlan Avenue Suite 201 Exton, PA 19341
Kristin Carlin, Marketing Manager 610-423-4335 kristin.carlin@agc.com www.agcchem.com

BETE Fog Nozzle, LLC
50 Greenfield Street Greenfield, MA 01301 Customer Service 413-772-0846 sales@bete.com bete.com?utm_source= carbcapmag&utm_medium= website&utm_content=directory
Armaturenfabrik Franz Schneider GmbH + Co. KG Bahnhofplatz 12 Nordheim/Heilbronn, BadenWuerttemberg 74226 Deutschland Konrad +497133101443 k.nawal@as-schneider.com www.as-schneider.com
Assured Automation 263 Cox Street Roselle, NJ 07203 Jennifer DiSante, Marketing Administrator 800-899-0553 jenniferd@aa-fs.com assuredautomation.com
Bradley Corporation W142N9101 Fountain Boulevard Menomonee Falls, WI 53051
Bryce Wenzel, Regional Applications Sales Manager 262-525-9757 bryce.wenzel@bradleycorp.com www.bradleycorp.com/
Commercial Fuel Solutions Ltd H1 Adanac North Southampton, Hampshire SO16 0BT United Kingdom Robin Futcher +44-2380-118-670 robin.futcher@commercialfuelsolutions. co.uk commercialfuelsolutions.co.uk
Project Development & Finance cont.
Hydro-Thermal™ Corporation
400 Pilot Court
Waukesha, WI 53188
Sales 262-548-8900
info@hydro-thermal.com www.hydro-thermal.com
KSB 4415 Sarellen Road
Henrico, VA 23231
Rene Kopp, Vice President 804-845-8156 rene.kopp@ksb.com ksb.com
Accounting
Pinion 8801 Renner Boulevard Suite 100 Lenexa, KS 66219
Kristin Chiera, Marketing Director 463-209-7650 kristin.chiera@pinionglobal.com www.pinionglobal.com
Southeast Capital & Finance, LLC PO Box 581 2301 Dodge Street Searcy, AR 72145
Jay Barber, President & CEO 501-246-8675
jay@southeastcapital.net southeastcapitalfinance.com
Viking Equipment Finance
5900 S Lake Forest Drive Suite 300 McKinney, TX 75070
Jim Buckingham, Director 972-885-8899
info@vikingequipmentfinance.com www.vikingequipmentfinance.com/ energy-equipment-financing
Economic Development
Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development 180 East 5th Street Suite 1200 Saint Paul, MN 55101
Lisa Hughes, Regional Business Development Manager/Cleantech Industry Specialist
507-380-3220
lisa.hughes@state.mn.us mn.gov/deed
Merjent, Inc.
1 Southeast Main Street Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669 angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
Syntek Resource Corporation 2143 18th Avenue Court Greeley, CO 80631
Sandra Robnett, CHM/CEO 970-356-9004 srobnett@gmail.com www.interasset.org
Western Research Institute 3474 North 3rd Street Laramie, WY 82072
Dr. Didier Lesueur, CEO 307-256-2651 dlesueur@uwyo.edu www.westernresearch.org
GIC Trade, Inc. PO Box 151590 Chevy Chase, MD 20825
Richard Gilmore, President/CEO 301-799-0840 rickgilmore@gicgroup.com www.gicgroup.com
Mickelson & Company 101 North Main Avenue Suite 210 Sioux Falls, SD 57104
Faith Larson, Vice President 612-512-5037 faith@mickco.com www.mickco.com
Magnatrol Valve Corporation 67 Fifth Avenue Hawthorne, NJ 07506
David J. Calafiore, Product Manager 973-427-4341 davec@magnatrol.com www.magnatrol.com
Progressive Energy LLC 111 Veterans Memorial Boulevard Suite 1546
Metairie, LA 70005
Nick Cioll, CEO 469-951-3264 ncioll@totalgen.com

D3MAX, LLC
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.d3maxllc.com
Valin Corporation 5215 Hellyer Avenue Suite 115
San Jose, CA 95138
Dave Molinari, Technical Sales Engineer 800-774-5630 learnmore@valin.com www.valin.com
Epitome Energy, LLC 1651 Old Highway 19 Red Wing, MN 55066
Dennis Egan, CEO 612-325-1330 dennis@epitomeenergy.com epitomeenergy-llc.com
Hengye Inc. 11999 Katy Freeway Suite 588 Houston, TX 77079
Mark Binns, Technical Business Director 502-232-5356 mbinns@hengyeinc.com hengyeinc.com
ProSim, Inc. 325 Chestnut Street Suite 800 Philadelphia, PA 19106
Gabriel Turzo, Sales Director 215-600-3759 fives-prosim.sales@fivesgroup.com www.fives-prosim.com
KATZEN International, Inc. 3805 Edwards Road Suite 500 Cincinnati, OH 45209
Robert E. Eickelberger, Vice President of Business Operations 513-351-7500 eickelberger@katzen.com www.katzen.com

Saola Energy 200 West Douglas Avenue Suite 230 Wichita, KS 67202
Ben Root, General Manager 316-413-3345 broot@saolaenergy.com www.saolaenergy.com
Reiter 599 Colonial Drive Grand Junction, CO 81507
Kristof Reiter, CEO 888-428-5617 kristof@reiterscientific.com reiter.com
Orennia 215 2 Street Southwest Suite 2600 Calgary, AB T2P 1M4 Canada
Orennia, Marketing 403-910-7166 marketing@orennia.com orennia.com
Solar-Carbon Solutions
13700 5th Avenue North Minneapolis, MN 55441
Andrew Leonard, Founder/Owner 612-232-2028 drew@solar-carbon.com solar-carbon.com

Brownseed Genetics, LLC PO Box 7 N1279 530th Street Bay City, WI 54723
Charles Brown, President 715-594-3355 cbrown@brownseed.com brownseedgenetics.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711 info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
Forest Concepts, LLC
3320 West Valley Highway North Suite D110 Auburn, WA 98001
Mike Perry, CEO 253-333-9663 mperry@forestconcepts.com www.forestconcepts.com
MicroBio Engineering Inc. 3988 Short Street #100 San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
John Benemann, CEO 925-352-3352 johnbenemann@ microbioengineering.com microbioengineering.com
Technology Centre Mongstad Mongstad 71A Mongstad, Vestland 5954 Norway
Julian Mikkelsen, Business Developer +47 56 34 52 20 jumi@tmcda.com tcmda.com
Xylogenics, Inc.
606 West Main Street Suite A Pittsboro, IN 46167
Josh Heyen, CEO & President 317-892-2135
jheyen@xylogenics.com xylogenics.com
Energy & Environmental Research Center 15 North 23rd Street, Stop 9018
Grand Forks, ND 58202
Nikki Krueger, Director of Communications 701-777-5428 eercinfo@undeerc.org undeerc.org
Gulf Coast Carbon Center 10611 Exploration Way Austin, TX 78758
Angela Luciano, Project Manager 512-471-0318
angela.luciano@beg.utexas.edu gccc.beg.utexas.edu/research/txla-cmc
University of Nebraska - Industrial Ag Products Ct 208 L.W. Chase Hall Lincoln, NE 68583
Loren Isom, Assistant Director 402-472-1634 loren.isom@unl.edu agproducts.unl.edu
Air Dimensions Inc. (An Ingersoll Rand Company) 1371 West Newport Center Drive Suite 101 Deerfield Beach, FL 33442
Tod Canty, Sales Manager 954-218-8134 tcanty@airdimensions.com www.airdimensions.com
Dearing Compressor & Pump Co. 3974 Simon Road Youngstown, OH 44512
Albin Dearing, President 330-599-5720 adearing@dearingcomp.com www.dearingcomp.com
Summit Lubrication 9010 County Road 2120 Tyler, TX 75707
Joshua Ware, Market Manager of Gas Compressors 903-579-9223
joshua.ware@klueber.com www.klsummit.com/en
Wanner Engineering 1204 Chestnut Avenue Minneapolis, MN 55403
Brian Rock, Marketing & Technical Publications 612-313-7872 brian.rock@wannerpumps.com wannerpumps.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711
info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
Tank Connection
3609 North 16th Street Parsons, KS 67357
Jeremy Burke, Director of Sales/ Business Development 620-423-3010 sales@tankconnection.com www.tankconnection.com
Tank Connection
3609 North 16th Street Parsons, KS 67357
Jordan LaForge, Director of Sales 620-423-3010 sales@tankconnection.com www.tankconnection.com
Winbco Tank Systems 1200 East Main Street Ottumwa, IA 52501
Sales Department 641-683-1855 sales@winbco.com winbco.com
Bruks Siwertell 5975 Shiloh Road Suite 109 Alpharetta, GA 30005
Mike Curci, VP, Sales & Marketing –Biomass Americas 770-849-0100 ext.109 mike.curci@bruks-siwertell.com www.bruks-siwertell.com
NETZSCH Pumps 119 Pickering Way Exton, PA 19341
Jeffrey Bye, Environmental Sales Director 484-787-7551 jeffrey.bye@netzsch.com pumps-systems.netzsch.com/en-US

Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711 info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
American Wood Fibers, Inc. 9740 Patuxent Woods Drive Suite 500 Columbia, MD 21046
Mike Pisczor, National Sales Manager 715-359-1336 mpisczor@awf.com www.awf.com
Boss Railcar Movers 4116 Drive Greaves Road #1138 Grandview, MO 64030
Chris Reed, Sales Manager 816-378-0001 sales@bossrcm.com bossrcm.com
Calbrandt PO Box 198 768 7th Street South Delano, MN 55328
Heidi Goldbeck, Marketing 763-972-8888 calbrandt@calbrandt.com www.calbrandt.com
Western Trailers PO Box 5598 Boise, ID 83705
Dan Taylor, Director of Sales 208-344-2539 wtsales@westerntrailer.com www.westerntrailer.com
Westmor Industries
3 Development Drive Morris, MN 56267
Jon Krueger, Sales Manager 320-589-2100 info@westmor-ind.com westmor-ind.com
Westmor Industries 3 Development Drive Morris, MN 56267
Jeremy Maguire, Sales Manager 651-842-2544
Jeremy.Maguire@Westmor-ind.com westmor-ind.com
AABB Inc.
3700 West Sam Houston Parkway South Houston, TX 77042
Teri Lesniak, Marketing Communications Manager 440-585-8751 teri.lesniak@us.abb.com www.abb.com
Advanced Biofuels USA
507 North Bentz Street Frederick, MD 21701
Joanne Ivancic, Executive Director 301-644-1395 info@AdvancedBiofuelsUSA.org https://advancedbiofuelsusa.info
Advanced Cryogenics, Ltd. PO Box 419
160 Indian Mound Trail Tavernier, FL 33070
Sam A. Rushing, President 305-852-2597 rushing@terranova.net www.carbondioxideconsultants.com
Aequor Inc.
10054 Mesa Ridge Court #106 San Diego, CA 92121
Marilyn Bruno, CEO 858-255-7854 mbruno@aequorinc.com www.aequorinc.com
AGC Chemicals Americas, Inc. 55 East Uwchlan Avenue Suite 201
Exton, PA 19341
Kristin Carlin, Marketing Manager 610-423-4335 kristin.carlin@agc.com www.agcchem.com
Air Dimensions Inc. (An Ingersoll Rand Company) 1371 West Newport Center Drive Suite 101 Deerfield Beach, FL 33442
Tod Canty, Sales Manager 954-218-8134 tcanty@airdimensions.com www.airdimensions.com
All-Trades Industrial Group, LLC 26099 Fort Circle Bay 103 Valley, NE 68064
Rob Horst, President 402-378-8881
rob.horst@all-trades.us all-trades.us/
Alpha Holdings LLC
402 North Division Street
Carson City, NV 89703
Christopher Miller, Managing Member 775-338-0371 ah_llc@yahoo.com www.alphaholdingsllc.com
Alternative Fuels & Chemicals Coalition 1200 G Street Northwest Suite 800 Washington, DC 20005
Dr. Ring Singh, Executive Vice President 202-922-0144 summer@altfuelchem.org www.altfuelchem.org
American Carbon Alliance 215 10th Street Suite 100
Des Moines, IA 50309
Tom Buis, CEO 515-423-0694 tbuis@americancarbonalliance.org americancarbonalliance.org
American Coalition for Ethanol 5000 South Broadband Lane Suite 224 Sioux Falls, SD 57108
Katie Muckenhirn, Vice President of Public Affairs 605-306-6107 kmuckenhirn@ethanol.org ethanol.org/
American Energy Enterprises Inc.
33 Obtuse Rocks Road Brookfield, CT 06804
Christopher Brown, Chairman 203-313-8177 christopher@ americanenergyenterprises.com americanenergyenterprises.com
American Wood Fibers, Inc. 9740 Patuxent Woods Drive Suite 500 Columbia, MD 21046
Mike Pisczor, National Sales Manager 715-359-1336 mpisczor@awf.com www.awf.com
AMETEK Process Instruments 150 Freeport Road Pittsburgh, PA 15238 Customer Service 412-828-9040 sales.ametekpi@ametek.com www.ametekpi.com
Amros Corporation 14006 Drakewood Drive Sugar Land, TX 77498
Vladimir G. Ingerman, Founder & CEO 281-240-0881 ingerman@amros.us amros.us
Anguil Environmental Systems 8855 North 55th Street Milwaukee, WI 53223
Hannah Pardee, Marketing Coordinator 414-365-6400 hannahp@anguil.com www.anguil.com
Apex Measurement and Controls, LLC 13455 Garden Grove Houston, TX 77082
Ardis Bartle, Manager 713-446-1902 ardisbartle@apexmeasurement.com www.eleven13solutions.com/
Armaturenfabrik Franz Schneider GmbH + Co. KG Bahnhofplatz 12 Nordheim/Heilbronn, BadenWuerttemberg 74226
Deutschland Konrad +497133101443 k.nawal@as-schneider.com www.as-schneider.com
ARTi
2151 Dean Avenue Des Moines, IA 50317 Sales Team 515-495-5101 arti@arti.com Renato Valverde, Carbon Analyst 515-495-5101 renato.valverde@arti.com Bernardo del Campo, CEO 515-495-5101 bernardo.delcampo@arti.com www.arti.com
Assured Automation 263 Cox Street Roselle, NJ 07203
Jennifer DiSante, Marketing Administrator 800-899-0553 jenniferd@aa-fs.com assuredautomation.com
A.T. Kearney
227 West Monroe Street Chicago, IL 60606
Neal Walters, Partner 416-389-7266 lorinda.chang@kearney.com kearney.com
Atlas Copco Gas and Process 46 School Road Voorheesville, NY 12186
Onur Serin, Market Segment Manager, CCUS onur.serin@atlascopco.com www.atlascopco.com/enus/compressors/products/ processairgasequipment
Avnos, Inc. 6060 Center Drive 10th Floor Los Angeles, CA 90045
Will Kain, Chief Executive Officer will@avnos.com www.avnos.com
Azura Associates International Inc. 490 Dutton Drive, Unit C4 Waterloo, ON N2L 6H7 Canada
David Ellis, President & CEO 877-298-7288 info@azuraassociates.com azuraassociates.com
BBarnhart Crane & Rigging 3604 West Hovland Drive Sioux Falls, SD 57107
Bill Vyhlidal, Business Development 712-522-0029 bvyhlidal@barnhartcrane.com www.barnhartcrane.com
Benz Technology International, Inc. 2305 South Clarksville Road Clarksville, OH 45113 Gregory Thomas Benz, President 937-289-4504 g.benz@benz-tech.com www.benz-tech.com
BETE Fog Nozzle, LLC 50 Greenfield Street Greenfield, MA 01301 Customer Service 413-772-0846 sales@bete.com bete.com?utm_ source=carbcapmag&utm_ medium=website&utm_ content=directory
Biodiesel Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.biodieselmagazine.com
Biofuels International/ Bioenergy Insight 124 Middleton Road Morden, Surrey SM4 6RW UK
Tracy Whitehead , Marketing and Events Manager +44 20 8687 4138 tracy@woodcotemedia.com www.bioenergy-news.com
BioInnovation Systems, LLC Rhode Island
Thomas-Anthony R. Viscione, Director of Business Development North America 401-236-5067 info@bioinnovation.systems www.bioinnovation.systems
BioIntelligence Technologies Inc. 1335 King West Suite 250 Sherbrooke, QC J1J 2B8 Canada
Rosy Trimboli, Director of Business Support 800-820-4783 rtrimboli@biointelligence.com biointelligence.com
Biomass Controls PBC
30A Crabtree Lane Woodstock, CT 06281
Jeff Hallowell, Founder 860-315-5735 jeff@biomasscontrols.com biomasscontrols.com
Biomass Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.biomassmagazine.com
Biotech Applied Research 1535 FL-64 Suite 101 Avon Park, FL 33825
Zack Farr, COO 863-443-7283 z.farr@biotechappliedresearch.org biotechappliedresearch.org
BKV Corporation 1200 17th Street Suite 2100 Denver, CO 80202 720-375-9680 info@bkvcorp.com www.bkv.com
Boss Railcar Movers 4116 Drive Greaves Road #1138 Grandview, MO 64030
Chris Reed, Sales Manager 816-378-0001 sales@bossrcm.com bossrcm.com
Bradley Corporation W142N9101 Fountain Boulevard Menomonee Falls, WI 53051
Bryce Wenzel, Regional Applications Sales Manager 262-525-9757
bryce.wenzel@bradleycorp.com www.bradleycorp.com/
Brentwood Industries, Inc.
500 Spring Ridge Drive Reading, PA 19610
Jason Hill, Marketing Specialist 610-347-8979
jason.hill@brentwoodindustries.com www.brentwoodindustries.com/ products/mass-transfer/
Bright Renewables
Thermen 10 Enschede, Overijssel 7521 PS The Netherlands
Tamarah Swensen, Marketing Manager 880-534-8088 pr@bright-renewables.com www.bright-renewables.com/
Brownseed Genetics, LLC PO Box 7 N1279 530th Street Bay City, WI 54723
Charles Brown, President 715-594-3355
cbrown@brownseed.com brownseedgenetics.com
Bruks Siwertell 5975 Shiloh Road Suite 109
Alpharetta, GA 30005
Mike Curci, VP, Sales & Marketing –Biomass Americas 770-849-0100 ext.109
mike.curci@bruks-siwertell.com www.bruks-siwertell.com/
Burns & McDonnell 9400 Ward Parkway Kansas City, MO 64114
Ben Voran, Energy Business Partner 913-909-1835 bdvoran@burnsmcd.com burnsmcd.com/ccmagazine
CCalbrandt PO Box 198 768 7th Street South Delano, MN 55328
Heidi Goldbeck, Marketing 763-972-8888 calbrandt@calbrandt.com www.calbrandt.com
Cambridge Pro Fab Inc. 84 Shaver Street Brantford, ON N3S 0H4 Canada
Jim Hodgins, Sales 519-998-5613 jhodgins@cambridgeprofab.com www.cambridgeprofab.com
Canadian Wood Waste Recycling Business Group #108 - 4301 B South Park Drive Suite 206 Stony Plain, AB T7Z 2A9 Canada
James A. Donaldson, CEO/SME Consultant 780-239-5445 jdonaldson@ cdnwoodwasterecycling.ca cdnwoodwasterecycling.ca/
CapCO2 Solutions 20-32 Linden Street Queens, NY 11385
Jeff Bonar, CEO 561-212-0451 jeff@capco2.solutions www.capco2.solutions
Capsol Technologies Drammensveien 126 Thune Eureka Building, 7th Floor Oslo 0277 Norway Johan Jungholm, Chief Business Development Officer +47 409 24 889 johan.jungholm@ capsoltechnologies.com www.capsoltechnologies.com
Carbon Capture Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.carboncapturemagazine.com
Carbon Capture & Storage Jobs
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com carboncapturemagazine.com/jobs
Carbon Capture & Storage Summit
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com carboncapturestoragesummit.com
Carbon Storage Solutions
31375 Great Western Drive Windsor, CO 80550
Dan Sanders, CEO/President 970-674-2910 drsanders@frontrangeenergy.com
CDRexperts
Eduard-Grunow-Street 1 Bremen, Freie Hansestadt 28203
Germany
Elisabete Trindade Pedrosa, Founder and Expert +4915735738475 contact@cdrexperts.org cdrexperts.org
Chief Ethanol Fuels, Inc. 4225 East South Street Hastings, NE 68901
Logan Yoder, Supply Chain Manager 402-460-3271
logan.yoder@chiefind.com chiefethanol.com
Chiz Bros. Refractory & Insulation Specialists 2117 Lincoln Boulevard Elizabeth, PA 15037
Mark Rhoa, Jr., Vice President of Sales 412-384-5220 mrhoajr@chizbros.com www.chizbros.com
Christianson CPA & Consultants
302 Southwest Fifth Street Willmar, MN 56201
Jamey Cline, Partner 573-680-6499
jcline@christiansoncpa.com www.christiansoncpa.com
CL Construction 2700 Fletcher Avenue Lincoln, NE 68504
Adam McLaughlin, Marketing Specialist 402-440-2212 adamm@clnebraska.com
Christopher Wittstruck, Director of Millwright 402-440-2212
chrisw@clnebraska.com CLNebraska.com
Clearview Sensing 2140 Green Meadows Drive Sealy, TX 77474
Jurgen Zach, Sensor Champion 832-436-8389
jzach@clearviewsensing.com leakspectrum.com
CO2SeQure 10777 Westheimer Street Suite 250 Houston, TX 77042
Mike Saunders, Business Development – Pipelines, CCUS, and Geothermal 713-742-3067
msaunders@microseismic.com www.microseismic.com
Commercial Fuel Solutions Ltd
H1 Adanac North Southampton, Hampshire SO16 0BT United Kingdom
Robin Futcher +44-2380-118-670 robin.futcher@ commercialfuelsolutions.co.uk commercialfuelsolutions.co.uk
Commodity Talent LLC
149 Terhune Road Princeton, NJ 08540
George Stein, Managing Director 917-545-9850 ghstein@commoditytalent.com www.CommodityTalent.com
Cooling Technology Institute (CTI) PO Box 681807 Houston, TX 77268
Jalene Fritz, Membership Committee 970-593-2434
jalenemf@gmail.com cti.org
CR Manufacturing 3724 Westgate Road Grand Island, NE 68803
Chris Whiting, Sales Manager 888-461-7040 chrisw@cr-mfg.com www.cr-mfg.com
DD3MAX, LLC
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.d3maxllc.com
Dalum Equipment Sømarksvej 53 Søndersø 5471
Denmark
Kelly Fetherolf, VP Sales 818-391-7544
kelly@dalumequipment.com Dalumequipment.com
Dearing Compressor & Pump Co
3974 Simon Road Youngstown, OH 44512
Albin Dearing, President 330-599-5720
adearing@dearingcomp.com www.dearingcomp.com
Delta CleanTech Ltd.
#500 550 6th Avenue Southwest Calgary, AB T2P 0S2
Canada
Jeff Allison, VP Business Development 306-530-6025
jallison@deltacleantech.com deltacleantech.com
DeWall Industrial Technologies 161 Bridgepoint Drive South St. Paul, MN 55075
Caleb Wall, Account Manager 651-263-1435 caleb@dewallindustrial.com www.dewallindustrial.com/products
Digester Doc
7835 West Mossy Cup Street Boise, ID 83709
Ian Rowland, Sales Representative 720-799-6505 ian@digesterdoc.com www.digesterdoc.com
DigiKerma 13800 Coppermine Road Suite 115 Herndon, VA 20171
Irfan K. Ali, Founder & CEO 703-234-5562 info@digikerma.com carbonkerma.com
Direct Companies
3405 North Louise Avenue Sioux Falls, SD 57107
Kyle Davis, Marketing Associate 605-864-8472
kyle.davis@directcompanies.com directcompanies.com/
DkS Engineering Consulting 12 Rodney Terrace Northborough, MA 01532
David Shum, Principal 774-258-2747
david_shum@post.harvard.edu www.linkedin.com/in/davidshum
Dürr CTS, Inc. 830 Prosper Street De Pere, WI 54115
Sales Department 800-558-5535 sales.amer@cts-durr.com www.cts-durr.com
EEidon LLC
7808 Southeast 24th Street Mercer Island, WA 98040
Roger Johnson, Founder 206-391-5232 roger.j@eidonllc.com eidonllc.com
ENERGYchange.com PO Box 24017 Guelph, ON N1E6V8 Canada
James Roszel, Administrator 519-767-2913 webmaster@energychange.com www.energychange.com
Energy & Environmental Research Center 15 North 23rd Street Stop 9018 Grand Forks, ND 58202
Nikki Krueger, Director of Communications 701-777-5428 eercinfo@undeerc.org undeerc.org
Enerquip Thermal Solutions 611 North Road Medford, WI 54451
Troy Weik, Sales & Channel Manager 833-516-6888 sales@enerquip.com www.enerquip.com/
Epcon Industrial Systems LP PO Box 7060 (17777 Interstate 45 S. Conroe, TX 77385) The Woodlands, TX 77387 Angie Anderson, Sales/Marketing 936-202-1227 angie@epconlp.com epconlp.com
Epitome Energy, LLC 1651 Old Highway 19 Red Wing, MN 55066 Dennis Egan, CEO 612-325-1330 dennis@epitomeenergy.com epitomeenergy-llc.com/
Ethanol Producer Magazine 308 Second Avenue North Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.ethanolproducer.com
Evergreen Engineering®, Inc. 1740 Willow Creek Circle Eugene, OR 97402
Aaron Edewards, Business Development Director 541-484-4771
aedewards@eeeug.com evergreenengineering.com
Exponent 4580 Weaver Parkway Suite 100
Warrenville, IL 60555
Dr. Sean Dee, Principal Engineer 630-658-7543
sdee@exponent.com www.exponent.com
FFagen, Inc. 501 West Highway 212 Granite Falls, MN 56241
Will Stark, Vice President Business Development 507-829-7051 wstark@fageninc.com www.fageninc.com
Fagus GreCon Inc.
648 Griffith Road, Suite A Charlotte, NC 28217
Attila Madarasz, CEO 704-315-2736
amadarasz@grecon.us www.fagus-grecon.com/en-us/ industrial-fire-protection
Farm Credit Services of America
South 118th Street Omaha, NE 68137
Jessica Bernstien, Agribusiness Lending VP 701-499-2633 jess.bernstien@agcountry.com www.fcsamerica.com
FibreForm Wood Products, Inc. 2121 Avenue of the Stars Suite 800 Los Angeles, CA 90067
Marc A Seidner, CEO 310-203-5401 marc@FibreForm.com
FibreForm Wood Products, Inc. 4265 San Felipe Street Suite 1100 Houston, TX 77027
Daniel J. Seidner, President 713-485-0970 daniel@FibreForm.com
Fischer Group Stainless Steel Tubing 547 Devonshire Road Windsor, ON N8Y 2L6
Canada
Joe McLinden, Sales ManagerNorth America 519-819-9308 jmclinden@fischerca.com www.fischerca.com
Forest Concepts, LLC
3320 West Valley Highway North Suite D110 Auburn, WA 98001
Mike Perry, CEO 253-333-9663 mperry@forestconcepts.com www.forestconcepts.com
GGECA Environnement 1480 Chemin du Club Nautique Lac Sergent, QC G0A 2J0
Canada
Suzanne Allaire, CEO 418-558-4762 suzanne.allaire@gecaenviro.com GECAenviro.com
Geostock Sandia 10930 West Sam Houston Parkway North Suite 100 Houston, TX 77064
Sylvain Riba, President & CEO 346-314-4347 sylvain.riba@geostocksandia.com www.geostocksandia.com
GIC Trade, Inc PO Box 151590 Chevy Chase, MD 20825
Richard Gilmore, President/CEO 301-799-0840 rickgilmore@gicgroup.com www.gicgroup.com
Good Land Industrial LLC N7441 Quiet Water Court New Lisbon, WI 53950 Jim Tassone, Owner 414-349-6664
jimt@goodlandind.com goodlandind.com
Graves & Co. Consulting 1201 Louisiana Street Suite 2720 Houston, TX 77002
John L. Graves, President 713-650-0811 jgraves@gravesconsulting.us gravesconsulting.us
Greater Fort Dodge Growth Alliance 24 North 9th Street
Suite A Fort Dodge, IA 50501
Jefferson Fosbender, Economic Development Director 515-227-7124
jefferson@greaterfortdodge.com www.greaterfortdodge.com
Greenedge 1876 23rd Street Southeast Bemidji, MN 56601
Aaron Poxleitner, Project Manager 218-556-0810
aaronp@greenedgeco.com greenedgeco.com
Gregersen Structural Engineering, Inc. 175 Blackfoot Street Mesquite, NV 89027
Max A. Gregersen, Principal Structural-Seismic Engineer 385-232-1747 max@gsestructural.com www.gsestructural.com
Gulf Coast Carbon Center 10611 Exploration Way Austin, TX 78758
Angela Luciano, Project Manager 512-471-0318
angela.luciano@beg.utexas.edu gccc.beg.utexas.edu/research/ txla-cmc
HHaffner Energy Inc. Greentown Labs 4200 San Jacinto Street Houston, TX 77004
Nathalie Ionesco, COO 713-297-1406
nathalie.ionesco@haffner-energy.com www.haffner-energy.com
Halliburton
3000 North Sam Houston Parkway East Houston, TX 77032
Robert Fleming, CCUS Segment Lead 303-308-4200
robert.fleming@halliburton.com www.Halliburton.com/LCS HeartFoods Group, PBC 1155 North State Street Suite 110 Bellingham, WA 98225
Mark Buehrer, CEO 360-815-6476 markb@heartfoodsgroup.com heartfoods.co
Heitman Architects
555 West Pierce Road Suite 130 Itasca, IL 60143
Paul Heitman, Director 630-773-3551 pheitman@heitmanarchitects.com www.heitmanarchitects.com
HEMCO Corporation
711 South Powell Road Independence, MO 64056
Jerry G. Schwarz, Marketing 816-796-2900 jerry.schwarz@hemcocorp.com hemcocorp.com
Hengye Inc. 11999 Katy Freeway Suite 588 Houston, TX 77079
Mark Binns, Technical Business Director 502-232-5356 mbinns@hengyeinc.com hengyeinc.com
Hexas Biomass
900 Jefferson Street Southeast #1113 Olympia, WA 98501
Wendy Owens, Founder & CEO 360-890-0775 info@hexas.com www.hexas.com
Husch Blackwell 3810 East Sunshine Street Suite 300 Springfield, MO 65809 Christopher Peterson, Partner 417-268-4057 chris.peterson@huschblackwell.com huschblackwell.com
HYCO1 15403 Vantage Parkway East Houston, TX 77032
Tim Lozano, Director, Marketing 281-433-8557 marketing@hyco1.com hyco1.com
Hydro-Thermal™ Corporation 400 Pilot Court Waukesha, WI 53188 Sales 262-548-8900 info@hydro-thermal.com www.hydro-thermal.com
IICM, Inc. PO Box 397
310 North First Street Colwich, KS 67030
Adriana Albornoz, Director of Marketing & Communications 316-796-0900 adriana.albornoz@icminc.com icminc.com
IEP Technologies 417-1 South Street Marlborough, MA 01752 Harland Conners, Marketing Specialist 855-793-3949 harland.conners@hoerbiger.com ieptechnologies.com
Indeck Power Equipment Company 1111 Willis Avenue Wheeling, IL 60090 Customer Service 847-541-8300 info@indeck-power.com indeck.com
Industrial Sales Solutions 3684 120th Court West Faribault, MN 55021
Jim Vogel, President 612-805-7646 jim.vogel@ind-sales.com www.ind-sales.com
Industry Link Sos. Stefan cel Mare 23 Bucharest, Sector 2 011736 Romania
Beatrice Ene, Managing Director +40-722-764-802 beatrice.ene@industrylink.eu industrylink.eu
Insured Carbon, LLC 5900 Rowland Road Minnetonka, MN 55343
Dennis Daggett, Partner/Chief Risk Officer 952-746-4353 info@agricapgroup.com agricapgroup.com
INTEC Engineering GmbH John-Deere-Strasse 43 Bruchsal, Baden-Wuerttemberg 76646
Germany
Christian Daniel, Key Account Manager +49-7251-93243-0 info@intec-energy.de www.intec-energy.de
International Biomass Conference & Expo
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.biomassconference.com
International Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.fuelethanolworkshop.com
Interstates, Inc.
1400 7th Avenue Northeast Sioux Center, IA 51250
Tyler Drenkow, Senior Business Development Representative 712-722-1662
tyler.drenkow@interstates.com www.interstates.com/
Iowa Central Fuel Testing Laboratory 1310 A Street West Fort Dodge, IA 50501
Donald Heck, Director 515-574-1259 fuels@iowafuellab.com ifl.iowacentral.edu
Iowa Renewable Fuels Association
5550 Wild Rose Lane Suite 340
West Des Moines, IA 50266
Lisa Coffelt, Marketing Director 515-829-0478 lcoffelt@iowarfa.org www.iowarfa.org
Isomer Project Group 1320 Hampton Avenue Ext. Suite 14 Greenville, SC 29601
RL Simpson, Managing Partner 864-565-9100 rl@isomer.group www.isomer.group
JJenike & Johanson
400 Business Park Drive Tyngsboro, MA 01879
Esin Sparrow, Marketing Manager 978-649-3300 esparrow@jenike.com www.jenike.com
KKATZEN International, Inc. 3805 Edwards Road Suite 500 Cincinnati, OH 45209
Robert E. Eickelberger, Vice President of Business Operations 513-351-7500 eickelberger@katzen.com www.katzen.com
KFI Engineers 670 County Road B West St. Paul, MN 55113
Chrissy McNamara, Marketing & Business Development Manager 651-771-0880 cmmcnamara@kfi-eng.com
Dave Jansa, Director of Marketing & Business Development 651-771-0880 dmjansa@kfi-eng.com kfi-eng.com
Kincannon & Reed 1019 Quince Road Harlan, IA 51537
Gary Weihs, Managing Partner 712-304-7334 gweihs@krsearch.com www.krsearch.com
Knobelsdorff 25701 370th Street Goodhue, MN 55027
Megan Ramaker, Director of Marketing 507-732-7610 meganr@keway.com knobelsdorffenterprises.com
KSB 4415 Sarellen Road Henrico, VA 23231
Rene Kopp, Vice President 804-845-8156 rene.kopp@ksb.com ksb.com
Kutak Rock LLP 1650 Farnam Street Omaha, NE 68102
David Bracht, Attorney 402-346-6000
david.bracht@kutakrock.com www.kutakrock.com
LLEC Partners, Inc. 245 First Street Suite 1800 Cambridge, MA 02142
Jason White, CEO 617-444-8750 info@lec-exec.com lee-enterprises.com
Life Cycle Associates 884 Portola Road Suite A11
Portola Valley, CA 94028
Stefan Unnasch, Managing Director 650-461-9048 outreach@lifecycleassociates.com www.lifecycleassociates.com
Linde
7000 High Grove Boulevard Burr Ridge, IL 60527
Wladimir Sarmiento-Darkin, Director, National Business Development 480-784-4111 wladimir.sarmiento-darkin@linde.com www.lindeus.com
Liquidmetal Industrial Solutions 6207 Jim Snow Way Chattanooga, TN 37421
Jonathan Starling, Marketing Manager 423-541-3210 jstarling@lmce.solutions www.liquidmetal-coatings.com
Low Carbon Fuels Coalition 980 Ninth Street, 16th Floor Sacramento, CA 95814
Graham Noyes, Managing Attorney 530-264-7157 graham@noyeslawcorp.com fuelandcarbonlaw.com
MMaas Companies Inc. PO Box 7127 Rochester, MN 55902
Tyler Maas, Director of Sales & Marketing 507-285-1444 maas@maascompanies.com www.maascompanies.com
Magnatrol Valve Corporation 67 Fifth Avenue Hawthorne, NJ 07506
David J. Calafiore, Product Manager 973-427-4341 davec@magnatrol.com www.magnatrol.com
Mapcon Technologies 2670 Fleur Drive Des Moines, IA 50321
Max Ervin, Corporate Solutions Manager 800-922-4336 mervin@mapcon.com www.mapcon.com
MAP General Mechanical Contractors, Inc. 2600 North West River Road Sanford, MI 48657
Todd Peterson, Business Development Director 701-566-2784
todd.peterson@mapmechanical.com mapmechanical.com
MarTech Systems, Inc. 7267 Chesapeake Drive Exmore, VA 23350
Loraine Huchler, President 609-865-8151 huchler@martechsystems.com martechsystems.com
Maryland Forestry Foundation 124 South Street Annapolis, MD 21401
Gary Allen, President 301-717-1579 gallenbay@gmail.com marylandforestryfoundation.org
Mead & Hunt 6737 West Washington Street Suite 3500 Milwaukee, WI 53214
Matt Quinn, Energy Project Developer 585-216-7076
matt.quinn@meadhunt.com meadhunt.com/markets/renewableenergy
Mercurius Biorefining 3190 Bay Road Ferndale, WA 98248
Eric Seck, Chief Operating Officer eric@mercuriusbiorefining.com mercuriusbiorefining.com
Merjent, Inc.
1 Southeast Main Street Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669 angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
Mickelson & Company 101 North Main Avenue Suite 210
Sioux Falls, SD 57104
Faith Larson, Vice President 612-512-5037 faith@mickco.com www.mickco.com
MicroBio Engineering Inc.
3988 Short Street #100 San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
John Benemann, CEO 925-352-3352 johnbenemann@ microbioengineering.com microbioengineering.com
Mid-South Engineering Co. 1658 Malvern Avenue Hot Springs, AR 71901
Chris Brown, President 501-321-2276 chris.brown@mseco.com www.mseco.com
Midwest Ironworks
200 1st Avenue Southeast Mapleton, ND 58059
Dustin Hartman, Sr. Project Manager 320-760-7579 dustinh@midwestironworks.com www.midwestironworks.com
Minnesota Bio-Fuels Association, Inc.
500 East Travelers Trail Suite 600 Burnsville, MN 55337
Brian Werner, Executive Director 612-888-9138 contact@mnbiofuels.org mnbiofuels.org
Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development
180 East 5th Street Suite 1200 Saint Paul, MN 55101
Lisa Hughes, Regional Business Development Manager/Cleantech Industry Specialist 507-380-3220
lisa.hughes@state.mn.us mn.gov/deed
Modular Energy Solutions PO Box 2759 Santa Clara, CA 95055
Charles Nolan, President 408-483-5922 chucknln@sbcglobal.net www.modular-e.com
Moore Fans
800 South Missouri Avenue Marceline, MO 64658
Spencer Ward, Business Development 660-376-3575 spencer.ward@moorefans.com www.moorefans.com
Munters Borgarfjordsgatan 16
Kista, Sweden 164 40
Danny Thierens, Sales Manager
Carbon Capture (Europe & Africa) +32 470 24 50 41
danny.thierens@munters.com
Francesca Martinelli, Sales Excellence Manager Carbon Capture +39 393 292 0145 francesca.martinelli@munters.com
Scott Thron, Sales Manager Clean Technologies (Americas) 239-690-8404
scott.thron@munters.com www.munters.com/en-be/ applications/gas-liquid-separation/ carbon-capture
My Source Solution, LLC
18926 Southwest 17th Court Miramar, FL 33029
Ritu Singh Linhart, CEO/President 305-812-8288 rlinhart@mysourcesolution.com mysourcesolution.com
NNESTEC, inc. PO Box 125 222 East Main Street
Pen Argyl, PA 18072
Scott Brayton, Director of Sales 248-794-3701 sbrayton@nestecinc.com www.nestecinc.com
NETZSCH Pumps 119 Pickering Way Exton, PA 19341
Jeffrey Bye, Environmental Sales Director 484-787-7551 jeffrey.bye@netzsch.com pumps-systems.netzsch.com/en-US
Nikua Training Center- Registered 501 (c) Non-Profit Organization 2397 Northwest Kings Boulevard #174 Corvallis, OR 97330
Daniel Shafer, CEO & Co-Director 541-224-6189 operations@nikua.org www.nikua.org
Nitto Denko 101 Metro Drive Suite 700 San Jose, CA 95110
Marcel Benz, Director of Business Development 760-277-7605 marcel.benz@nitto.com www.nitto.com/us/en/products/ etechnology
North American Biocarbon Conference
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.BiocarbonConference.com
North American SAF Conference & Expo
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.safconference.com
North Dakota Ethanol Producers Association
1605 East Capitol Avenue Bismarck, ND 58502
Laura Lacher, Executive Director 701-355-4458 llacher@ clearwatercommunications.net www.facebook.com/ NorthDakotaEthanol
Northern Crops Institute 1300 18th Street North Fargo, ND 58102
Casey Peterson, Program Development Manager 701-231-4250 casey.peterson@ndsu.edu www.northern-crops.com
Nuada 9 Michelin Road Newtownabbey, Antrim BT36 4PT United Kingdom Stratos Stavrakakis, Business Development Manager +02890255044 e.stavrakakis@nuadaco2.com nuadaco2.com
OObsidian Engineering 500, 435 4th Avenue Southwest Calgary, AB T2P 3A8 Canada
Jeremy Zhao, Process Engineer 403-891-8650 jeremy.zhao@obsidianeng.ca www.obsidianeng.ca
Olson Search International, Inc. PO Box 3468 Boulder, CO 80307 Jon Olson, President 800-985-5191 jon@olsonsearch.com olsonsearch.com
ONYM Group 115 Martin Street Adstock, QC G0N 1S0 Canada
Mustapha Ouyed, Cofounder & Executive VP 514-895-9592 mustapha.ouyed@groupeonym.com groupeonym.com/en
Optical Scientific inc 2 Metropolitan Court Suite 6 Gaithersburg, MD 20878
James William Shinkle, Business Development 312-237-0375 jwshinkle@opticalscientific.com www.opticalscientific.com
Orennia 215 2 Street Southwest Suite 2600 Calgary, AB T2P 1M4 Canada Orennia, Marketing 403-910-7166 marketing@orennia.com orennia.com
Oxidizers, Inc. 1731 Pomona Road Corona, CA 92880
Leah Zuercher, Field Project Facilitator & Field Technician 951-271-3990 leah@oxidizers.net oxidizers.net
PPainters
570 Mitchell Road Glendale Heights, IL 60139
Samantha Kazumura, Marketing Manger 800-999-8715 info@paintersinc.com www.painters.com
PCC Hydrogen Inc. 11361 Decimal Drive Louisville, KY 40299
Jeffrey Harrison, CTO 502-439-1784 jbharrison@pcchydrogen.com www.pcchydrogen.com
Pelican Energy Consultants 4099 Highway 190 East Service Road Covington, LA 70433
Ed Covington, Vice President of Strategy & Markets 985-871-4200
ed.covington@pelicanenergy.com pelicanenergy.com
Pellet Mill Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.biomassmagazine.com
Permanente Corporation
4265 San Felipe Street Suite 1100 Houston, TX 77027
Daniel J. Seidner, President 713-485-0970
daniel@permanentecorp.com www.permanentecorp.com
Permanente Corporation 2121 Avenue of the Stars Suite 800 Los Angeles, CA 90067
Marc A. Seidner, CEO 310-203-5401 marc@permanentecorp.com www.permanentecorp.com
Pinion 8801 Renner Boulevard Suite 100 Lenexa, KS 66219
Kristin Chiera, Marketing Director 463-209-7650
kristin.chiera@pinionglobal.com www.pinionglobal.com/
Pinnacle Engineering, Inc.
11541 95th Avenue North Minneapolis, MN 55369
Steve Schleicher, Vice President 507-261-0918
steve@pineng.com www.pineng.com
Plaas Incorporated 1427 Old West Main Street Red Wing, MN 55066
Brian Holmstadt, Sales & Marketing 651-388-8881
brianh@plaasinc.com www.plaasinc.com/
Precision Combustion, Inc. 410 Sackett Point Road North Haven, CT 06473
Stewart Rosenberg, Business Development Leader 203 287-3700
srosenberg@pci.energy pci.energy
Progressive Energy LLC 111 Veterans Memorial Boulevard Suite 1546
Metairie, LA 70005
Nick Cioll, CEO 469-951-3264 ncioll@totalgen.com
Pro Maintenance, Inc. PO Box 575 10 Michigan Street Northeast Hutchinson, MN 55350
Kevin Maroney, Sales Specialist 320-552-5604
manderson@promaintenanceinc.com
Pro Maintenance, Inc., Project Coordinator 320-587-3135
manderson@promaintenanceinc.com promaintenanceinc.com
ProSim, Inc. 325 Chestnut Street Suite 800 Philadelphia, PA 19106
Gabriel Turzo, Sales Director 215-600-3759 fives-prosim.sales@fivesgroup.com www.fives-prosim.com
PYRONEXUS, LLC 1701 River Run Suite 701 Fort Worth , TX 76107
Byron Biggs, CEO 817-632-5033
sales@pyronexusglobal.com pyronexusglobal.com
QQuveon Karl Fischer Reagents: Made in the USA
599 Raleigh Road Suite C Henderson, NC 27536
Marlene Stewart, Sales 818-292-8612
marlene.stewart@quveon.com www.quveon.com
RR.C. Costello & Assoc., Inc. 1611 South Pacific Coast Highway Suite 302
Redondo Beach, CA 90277
Rocky Costello, President 310-792-5870
crosenthal@rccostello.com www.rccostello.com
Reiter 599 Colonial Drive Grand Junction, CO 81507
Kristof Reiter, CEO 888-428-5617 kristof@reiterscientific.com reiter.com
Renewable Energy Institute 6705 Bancroft Woods Austin, TX 78729
Monty Goodell, Executive Director 832-758-0027 info@ CarbonCaptureAndSequestration.com carboncaptureandsequestration.com
ResourceWise 15720 Brixham Hill Avenue Suite 550 Charlotte, NC 28211
Angela Rockwell, Director of Marketing 803-269-7441
angela.rockwell@resourcewise.com resourcewise.com
Roeslein 9200 Watson Road Suite 200 St. Louis, MO 63126
John Demoulin, Vice President of Business Development & Marketing 314-729-0055 sales@roeslein.com roeslein.com
RTP Environmental Associates, Inc. 400 Post Avenue Suite 405 Westbury, NY 11590
Jessica Karras-Bailey, Principal 516-333-4526 bailey@rtpenv.com www.rtpenv.com
SSAF Magazine
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.safmagazine.com
SAFPath New York 11590
Sara Fletcher, Director info@safpath.com www.safpath.com
Salof Limited Inc. 5141 I-35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744 sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com
Saola Energy 200 West Douglas Avenue Suite 230 Wichita, KS 67202
Ben Root, General Manager 316-413-3345
broot@saolaenergy.com www.saolaenergy.com
Saulsbury Industries 2951 East Interstate 20 Odessa, TX 79766
Savanah Cantleberry, Savanah Cantleberry 432-366-3686
scantleberry@saulsbury.com www.saulsbury.com
Select Domains PO Box 4068 Naples, ME 04055
Robert Fogg, Owner 207-650-9494 robertfogg@q-team.com www.facebook.com/profile. php?id=61557242306370
Sensor Electronics Corporation 12370 Creek View Avenue Savage, MN 55378
Sarah Robb, Marketing Manager 952-938-9486 srobb@sensorelectronic.com www.sensorelectronics.com
SGS Beta 4985 Southwest 74th Court Miami, FL 33155 Customer Care 305-662-7760 info@betalabservices.com www.betalabservices.com
Siouxland Energy Cooperative 3890 Garfield Avenue
Sioux Center, IA 51250
Leah Holverson, Land Manager 712-722-4904
leah@siouxlandenergy.com www.siouxlandenergy.com
Skyven Technologies 4440 Spring Valley Road Farmers Branch, TX 75244
Jim Saccone, Sr. Vice President of Global Sales 214-494-1152 info@skyven.co www.skyven.co
Smart Strategies LLC
236 East 81st Street, Floor 2 New York, NY 10028
Nelson Garcez, CEO 646-594-5399
nelson.garcez@smartstrat.com www.smartstrat.com
Solar-Carbon Solutions
13700 5th Avenue North Minneapolis, MN 55441
Andrew Leonard, Founder/Owner 612-232-2028 drew@solar-carbon.com solar-carbon.com
Southeast Capital & Finance LLC PO Box 581
2301 Dodge Street Searcy, AR 72145
Jay Barber, President & CEO 501-246-8675
jay@southeastcapital.net southeastcapitalfinance.com
Southeastern Construction 1150 Pebbledale Road Mulberry, FL 33860
James Green, Business Development Manager 863-428-1511 jamesg@secm.co www.southeasternconst.com
SRI Instruments 20720 Earl Street Torrance, CA 90503
SRI Instruments, CEO 310-214-5092 hugh@srigc.com www.srigc.com
Stark Tech 2100 Wehrle Drive Buffalo, NY 14221
Rachel Corsaro, Marketing & Events Specialist 716-693-4490
corsaror@starktech.com www.starktech.com
Strobel Companies
106 South Green Street Clarks, NE 68628
Larry Myers, Client Development 308-624-4999 lmyers@strobelenergy.com strobelenergy.com
Sulzer 900 Threadneedle Street Suite 700 Houston, TX 77079
Sebastian Arango, Carbon Capture Sales & Applications Manager 832-589-4843
sebastian.arango@sulzer.com www.sulzer.com
Summit Lubrication 9010 County Road 2120 Tyler, TX 75707
Sam Kennedy, Market Manager, Global Business Team, Gas Compressor & Turbine 903-805-3761
sam.kennedy@klsummit.com www.klsummit.com
Sustainable Fuels Summit: SAF, Renewable Diesel & Biodiesel
308 Second Avenue North Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.sustainablefuelssummit.com
Swenson Technology 1000 Lumber Street Crete, IL 60417
Erick Neuman, Global Business Manager 708-587-2300
sales@swensontechnology.com swensontechnology.com
SW Firefighting Foam & Equipment LLC
25A Lone Pine Ridge Santa Fe, NM 87505
Casey Ryan, Manager 505-699-5068 cryan@swfirefightingfoam.com novacool.com
Syntek Resource Corporation 2143 18th Avenue Court Greeley, CO 80631
Sandra Robnett, CHM/CEO 970-356-9004 srobnett@gmail.com www.interasset.org
TTank Connection
3609 North 16th Street Parsons, KS 67357
Jordan LaForge, Director of Sales 620-423-3010
sales@tankconnection.com www.tankconnection.com
Technology Centre Mongstad Mongstad 71A Mongstad, Vestland 5954
Norway
Julian Mikkelsen, Business Developer +47 56 34 52 20 jumi@tmcda.com tcmda.com
TEMS Inc. PO Box 64546 RPO Como Lake Coquitlam, BC V3J 7V7 Canada
Paul Tinari, CEO 604-760-5088 tinarip@yahoo.com tinari3d.ca
The New York Blower Company 7660 South Quincy Street Willowbrook, IL 60527
Ben Zastrow, Director of Marketing 630-794-5731 bzastrow@nyb.com www.nyb.com
Thermo Fisher Scientific 5225 Verona Road Madison, WI 53711 info.spectroscopy@thermofisher.com www.thermofisher.com/MMAIO
Todd & Sargent, Inc 2905 Southeast 5th Street Ames, IA 50010
Scott Sylvester, Vice President 515-956-4805
ssylvester@tsargent.com www.tsargent.com
Toshiba America Energy Systems 6623 West Washington Street West Allis, WI 53214
Laura Baumann, Director of Marketing 716-799-1080
laura.baumann@toshiba.com www.toshiba.com/taes
TRC Environmental Corp. 207C Eisenhower Lane South Lombard, IL 60148
Daniel F. Grabowski, Project Director 312-533-2024
dgrabowski@trccompanies.com www.trccompanies.com
Trihydro Corporation 1252 Commerce Drive Laramie, WY 82070
Carly Sowecke, Senior Geologist/ Hydrogeologist 307-460-0831
csowecke@trihydro.com www.trihydro.com
TTUS Inc. 1457 Ammons Street Suite 107 Lakewood, CO 80214
Binh Le, General Manager 402-805-2968 binh.le@ttusinc.com ttusinc.com
Tubacero
Vicente Guerrero 3729 Nte. Monterrey, Nuevo León 64500 Mexico
Arturo Marquez, Export Manager +52-81-8305-5536 amarquez@tubacero.com www.tubacero.com
UUnited Lands Company, Inc 522 North New Hampshire Street Suite B Covington, LA 70433
Brian Greffenius, Senior VP 985-893-4151
briang@unitedlandsco.com unitedlandsco.com
University of NebraskaIndustrial Ag Products Ct 208 L.W. Chase Hall Lincoln, NE 68583
Loren Isom, Assistant Director 402-472-1634 loren.isom@unl.edu agproducts.unl.edu
USA BioEnergy 7440 East Pinnacle Peak Road Suite 140 Scottsdale, AZ 85255
Nick Andrews, CEO 602-909-6677 nick@bioenergy.com www.BioEnergy.com
Uzelac Industries Inc. N45W22900 Lindsay Road Pewaukee, WI 53072
Mia Ivetic, Marketing Manager 414-529-0240 mia@uzelacind.com uzelacind.com
VValin Corporation 5215 Hellyer Avenue Suite 115
San Jose, CA 95138
Dave Molinari, Technical Sales Engineer 800-774-5630
learnmore@valin.com www.valin.com
Valley Process Technologies 2483 9th Street North Whapeton, ND 58075
Ryan Brock, Account Manager 402-270-3603
ryan@valleyprocesstech.com
Mike Thummel, CEO/Owner 701-404-0941
mike@valleyprocesstech.com valleyprocesstech.com
Valuation and Assets Services, LLC
2108 Carroll Creek View Frederick, MD 21702
K. Boison, Principal 301-646-4119 projects@valuationandassets.com www.valuationandassets.com
Vault 44.01
1125 17th Street Suite 1275 Denver, CO 80202
Hugh Caperton, Sr. Vice President of Development 713-930-4401 info@vault4401.com www.vault4401.com
Verico Technology 230 Shaker Road Enfield, CT 06082
Brian Pahl, Sales Director 860-871-1200 bpahl@vericotechnology.com www.vericocontractcoating.com
Viking Equipment Finance
5900 South Lake Forest Drive Suite 300 McKinney, TX 75070
Jim Buckingham, Director 972-885-8899
info@vikingequipmentfinance.com www.vikingequipmentfinance.com/ energy-equipment-financing
Vista Projects
330-4000 Fourth Street Southeast Calgary, AB T2G 2W3 Canada
Leslie Cassidy, Business Development 403-255-3455
leslie.cassidy@vistaprojects.com www.vistaprojects.com
WWAEES
3215 South Providence Road Suite 3 Columbia, MO 65203
John Kruse, Managing Principal 573-228-9842 jkruse@waees-llc.com www.waees-llc.com
Wanner Engineering 1204 Chestnut Avenue Minneapolis, MN 55403
Brian Rock, Marketing & Technical Publications 612-313-7872 brian.rock@wannerpumps.com wannerpumps.com
Western Research Institute 3474 North 3rd Street Laramie, WY 82072
Dr. Didier Lesueur, CEO 307-256-2651 dlesueur@uwyo.edu www.westernresearch.org
Western Trailers PO Box 5598 Boise, ID 83705
Dan Taylor, Director of Sales 208-344-2539 wtsales@westerntrailer.com www.westerntrailer.com
Westmor Industries 3 Development Drive Morris, MN 56267
Jon Krueger, Sales Manager 320-589-2100 info@westmor-ind.com westmor-ind.com
Westmor Industries
3 Development Drive Morris, MN 56267
Jeremy Maguire, Sales Manager 651-842-2544
Jeremy.Maguire@Westmor-ind.com westmor-ind.com
Winbco Tank Systems
1200 East Main Street Ottumwa, IA 52501
Sales Department 641-683-1855 sales@winbco.com winbco.com
XXDH-energy 45 Oak Street Colorado Springs, CO 80906
Xavier Dhubert, Sr. Consultant 904-277-4090
xavier.dhubert@xdh-energy.com xdh-energy.com
Xylogenics, Inc. 606 West Main Street Suite A Pittsboro, IN 46167
Josh Heyen, CEO & President 317-892-2135 jheyen@xylogenics.com xylogenics.com
YYilkins PO Box 8210
Groningen 9728XA
The Netherlands
Maikel van Loo, Controller +3185-007-0553
m.vanloo@yilkins.com yilkins.com
Yilkins PO Box 8210
Groningen 9728XA
The Netherlands
Guy Penard, VP North America 978-394-4200
g.penard@yilkins.com yilkins.com













