September 13, 2010

Synergistic acquisition to promote innovation

In January, BASF and LKCA (a subsidiary of Linde Group), announced that they would jointly market licenses and plants for the capture of CO2 from flue gases, and recently, with assistance from RWE Power, they have created (and successfully tested) a major breakthrough in carbon capture technology. The new innovative technology captures CO2 by means of utilizing new chemical solvents that can reduce energy input by about 20 percent. Furthermore, the new solvents feature superior oxygen stability, which reduces solvent consumption significantly, which consequently improves efficiency.

In the future, climate-capture technology will likely play a key role in generating climate-compatible power from coal, and this new technology process, once scaled up to large power plants, will reduce power plant waste gases and facilitate clean energy generation. In addition, as this technology should capture more than 90% of the CO2 contained in waste gases, a vast supply of recycled CO2 can be created and used for inputs in chemical transformations such as production of fertilizers. New plants demonstrating this technology are scheduled to be in operation by 2015, and the technology should be expected to be utilized commercially in coal-fired power stations by 2020. Ultimately, once this technology expands, there will be a significant reduction in the release of climate-damaging CO2 due to its successful capture and transport for recycling or sequestration.

So, why is this development relevant in the chemicals industry? And why is it relevant within the private equity industry? First, this development illustrates the strong motivations within the chemicals industry to become more environmentally sustainable while simultaneously reducing costs and improving efficiency. Furthermore, this new technology derived directly from the pooling of knowledge and resources from various firms with different areas of expertise; individually, the companies would likely have found development of this technology exceedingly difficult, however, when their resources were combined, breakthroughs were managed in rapid fashion. Similarly, in the private equity industry, companies are strategically acquired so as to enable such synergies to promote swift innovation and long-term value creation, and as this particularly example clearly illustrates, the broader chemicals industry provides a viable forum in which to initiate such developments.

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