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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
6.25.2008 - 05:52pm ET
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Albemarle Invests in Cleaner, Safer Magnesium Alkyl Process
Sustainable new production method recycles solvents, reduces waste at Company's Pasadena plant
(CSRwire) BATON ROUGE, La., June 25 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Leading catalyst maker
Albemarle Corporation (NYSE: ALB) is continuing its aggressive focus on
sustainable business practices by investing in a new process that is
expected to eliminate more than 80 percent of the process-related waste at
Albemarle's main organometallics plant, located in Pasadena, Texas, USA.
The waste is associated with the production of BEM, an essential component
in the manufacture of two of the world's most widely used plastic
resins.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050801/ALBEMARLELOGO
)
BEM, or n-Butylethylmagnesium, is a magnesium alkyl catalyst component
used in the manufacture of Ziegler-Natta catalysts that are critical in
making the plastic resins polyethylene and polypropylene.
The new process, which is expected to be operational in the first quarter
of 2009, will significantly reduce waste by recycling solvent from the
process waste slurry and making it available for reuse, and by converting
the residual solids to a material suitable for onsite disposal.
Created by Albemarle process engineers at the company's Pasadena plant
site, the new, proprietary BEM production method also eliminates hundreds
of loading operations per year involving the waste, leading to a cleaner,
safer manufacturing process and manufacturing site.
"This sustainable process change will deliver a positive impact on safety,
the environment and operational efficiency at our Pasadena plant, and will
continue to deliver high-quality end products and services to our
customers," said Amy Motto, director of Albemarle's global polyolefin and
chemical catalysts business.
The Pasadena BEM project is the latest in a string of investments made by
Albemarle at Company and joint venture plants around the world to
introduce sustainable environmental and safety improvements into its
organometallics operations.
In 2007, Albemarle invested in a similar new process in the manufacturing
plant of its joint venture in Osaka, Japan, Nippon Aluminum Alkyls, where
the plant celebrated its first-ever, zero-emissions year of operation. In
2005, Albemarle financed a new incinerator at its aluminum alkyls
manufacturing plant in Feluy, Belgium.
"This innovation is typical of the creative and sustainable initiatives
that are taking place every day at Albemarle," said Albemarle president
and chief executive officer, Mark C. Rohr. "We are working on every front
to maintain and expand our leadership in the polymer and chemical catalyst
area-from new technology and process improvements to advances in the safe
handling and environmental stewardship of our products. It's all about
innovation and growth for our customers, while doing what's best for the
environment and human safety."
Additional information on Albemarle's holistic approach to creating a
sustainable business model can be found in the Company's 2007 Corporate
Sustainability Report entitled "What Matters Most." The report is
available via Albemarle's website at www.albemarle.com.
Albemarle Corporation, headquartered in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, is
a leading global developer, manufacturer and marketer of highly engineered
specialty chemicals for consumer electronics; petroleum and petrochemical
processing; transportation and industrial products; pharmaceuticals;
agricultural products; and construction and packaging materials. The
Company operates in three business segments-Polymer Additives, Catalysts
and Fine Chemicals, and serves customers in approximately 100 countries.
Learn more about Albemarle at www.albemarle.com.
"Safe Harbor" Statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act
of 1995: Statements in this press release regarding Albemarle Corporation's
business which are not historical facts are "forward-looking statements"
that involve risks and uncertainties. For a discussion of such risks and
uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ from those
contained in the forward-looking statements, see "Risk Factors" in the
Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K.
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