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Insights, articles, and resources on turning industrial waste into value.

New data from an ongoing pilot test at a Danish landfill shows remarkable results. BioScavenge has succeeded in treating PFAS-contaminated leachate down to levels far below national limits. GRINDSTED, Denmark.

Every year, industries around the world purchase enormous volumes of solvents for cleaning, extraction, coating, processing, and chemical reactions. Solvents like NMP, ethanol, isopropanol, and other high-value compounds keep production

Leather production has always relied on transformation — turning raw hides into durable, beautiful materials. But behind that transformation lies another, less visible reality: large volumes of wastewater loaded with

Pharmaceutical production relies on enormous volumes of water — for fermentation, heating, cooling, cleaning, dilution, rinsing, and more. Each step has its own purity requirements. Each step generates wastewater. And

Mining water has always been seen as a challenge – something to treat, neutralize, and discharge. But what if that very same water could be a source of value? Across

PFAS is often described as a “forever chemical,” but that phrase doesn’t really communicate just how persistent it is. These compounds are designed not to break down. They repel oil

The Technical University of Denmark and Bioscavenge ApS published a new manuscript in the internationally recognized journal called “Current Opinion in Chemical Engineering” For more information, please click here

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