Hey Peter - I probably should have taken better advantage of your presence when you announced that you would be answering questions - as such, I understand if you don't get to this one.
I know the company has shelved land based waste gasification for the time being in lieu of lower hanging fruit (seems to be the smartest move), I'm just curious about whether you can speak to the exact chemical output of the process.
From previous materials released by the company I believe that roughly 10 parts waste ends up 1 part slag and 9 parts hydrocarbon based "gas" of some sort. The reason I'm interested in the output is I'm curious if it is a suitable stock material for various plastics.
Eventually (let's say 10, 20, maybe 50 years), production of a hydrocarbon that can be burned for power generation is probably not a desirable output. An almost entirely contained "plastic cycle" I could see having merit though (rather than ending up in waste dumps, getting gassified again to meet the next required plastic product). I guess it is becoming more and more apparent that traditional recycling is not nearly as efficient as we all hoped, curious if this could be an alternative.
Thank you for your consideration, and many thank yous for the continuous hard work you and the PYR team put forward.
M.