Enerkem is the only one that can produce ethanol and methanol using full solid waste. Our process is different from what you are referring to, in that you are referring to plasmafication, which operates at very high temperatures, more like 4,000°C or 5,000°C. We operate at low severity. We have our own process to crack this solid material and transform it into a synthesis gas.
Then, not only is our process producing that gas and burning it in an engine to produce electricity, it is converted into liquid products by interacting with catalysts. We produce methanol and then ethanol. Methanol is produced from natural gas. Our gas can interact with those catalysts that are today producing methanol from natural gas, and then we convert it later with other catalysts. In five minutes, the solid material—this garbage mix of diapers, old pairs of shoes, plastics that are non-recyclable, pizza containers, and whatever—is converted into methanol or ethanol.
It's different. Ours is integrated. I haven't seen any plasma gasification that can convert to liquid chemicals. It usually produces electricity.