Newsroom
US-based Next Rung to commercialize C-Green’s technology in North America
C-Green entered into a three-year partnership with Next Rung Technology, a US-based engineering and consulting organization. The partnership will focus on managing the marketing and development of opportunities for the installation of C-Green’s technology in North America.
C-Green co-founds cooperation for circular and climate-smart sludge handling in the Netherlands
C-Green is taking joint action together with Dutch market leaders Waternet and REYM Rotterdam to increase circularity and reduce the climate impact of sludge handling.
REYM Rotterdam and C-Green collaborate to reduce climate impact from industrial wet waste
REYM, the leading Dutch industrial waste management company, and C-Green are launching a unique collaboration to reduce the climate impact and increase the circularity of industrial sludge.
IVL report concludes C-Green’s technology can enable sustainable recycling of nutrients and reduce greenhouse gas emissions
IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute’s new report on the project to build world's first ‘sludge-free’ sewage treatment plant concludes that C-Green’s OxyPower HTC™ technology can enable sustainable recycling of nutrients and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Clean-up of Lake Ala Lombolo, Kiruna County
The Swedish Geological Survey (SGU) has commissioned Sweco to, with C-Green’s help, prepare measures for the decontamination of the polluted lake Ala Lombolo in Kiruna County, Sweden.
Swedish sludge debate gains momentum
Recently the sludge debate in Sweden intensified after several media articles, the most prominent one by the Minister of the Environment and Climate, Per Bolund.
40 MSEK grant from Swedish Energy Agency
C-Green has received a grant from the Swedish Energy Agency for a new application – conversion of municipal wastewater sewage sludge into valuable resources.
Mobile plant soon to hit the highway
With a capacity of one ton of sludge per day, the mobile plant is the size of a 40-foot standard container and can easily be transported on a truck bed.
Corona found in sewage
Recent studies show that SARS coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the strain of coronavirus that causes the COVID-19 disease, can be detected in sewage. A separate study shows that bacteria and DNA in virus are destroyed when subjected to HTC-treatment.