The low-temperature gasification process.... First of all, all the waste, sir, will be under contract and there will be specific types of organic waste brought to the facility.
As the waste goes through the thermal degradation or the primary gasification chamber, basically what we're doing is culling out all the carbon base that's in the waste and we're producing what's called a synthetic gas, or syngas. As a result of the process, we are right now decomposing or degrading the waste down to about 2% remaining as an inert, non-toxic ash.
As a result of putting through 100 pounds, we're left with 2% of that product as an inert, non-toxic ash. What we are creating is a synthetic gas. It will then be combusted, just as we combust a natural gas. For this particular facility proposed project, we'd be taking that gas and turning it into a high-pressure, high-temperature steam through a steam turbine to produce the electricity that we'll be purposing.
All of the impurities or compounds are going to be oxidized in the syngas burner and consequently at the back end, as Lewis alluded to in the presentation, we'll have an air quality control system that's designed to pull impurities out of the process.