Ecoslops, the first company to develop technology to produce recycled marine fuels from marine oil residues (‘slops’) announced that it has signed a Letter of Intent (LOI) with Grup Servicii Petroliere (GSP) offshore drilling and construction company, to conduct a feasibility study for the development of an oil residues processing plant in the Romanian Port of Constanta, on the Black Sea.
Vincent Favier, CEO of Ecoslops, says: “The proven operational efficiency of our first industrial plant in the Port of Sinès, which recycles over 98% of slops collected, and the subsequent sale of marine fuel and light bitumen products, validates our business model, and have given us the confidence and springboard to ramp up our expansion projects. The Port of Constanta is ideally located, and GSP is the ideal partner to collaborate with on the development of this significant project, given their wealth of industrial experience and in-depth knowledge of the region.”
Ecoslops has just signed a Letter of Intent with Grup Servicii Petroliere (GSP), a group well established in the Port of Constanta, to explore the feasibility of creating an oil residues recycling plant in this Romanian port on the Black Sea. Subject to a positive outcome of the feasibility study, Ecoslops and GSP will form a joint venture to implement the project, from building and managing the plant to selling its products.
The Port of Constanta, on the west coast of the Black Sea, is one of the main petroleum product distribution centers for Central and Eastern Europe, and is directly connected, via the Black Sea – Danube and Danube – Rhine major waterways, to the Port of Rotterdam, where GSP has an office. The Petromidia Refinery, owned by KazMunayGas and Rompetrol, with an annual capacity of 5MT, is also located in the vicinity of the Port of Constanta. Once operational, this new plant could collect maritime transport oil residues from Bulgarian, Turkish, Ukrainian, Russian and Georgian ports.
This latest development follows the implementation of industrial production at Ecoslops’ plant in the Port of Sinès, Portugal, and the first sale of marine fuel products and light bitumen.
Source: EcoSlops