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Monday, 10/03/2022 8:14:11 AM

Monday, October 03, 2022 8:14:11 AM

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TOMORROW'S WINNERS TODAY

CLEAN VISION PLANS TO TAKE MOUNTAINS OF UNWANTED PLASTIC WASTE AND CONVERT IT INTO MILLIONS OF BARRELS OF CLEAN FUEL

­­Nobody Wants Billions of Dollars of Plastic Waste – Clean Vision Does and Will Convert it into Clean Fuel for Big Profit

National Geographic reports 91% of all plastic is not recycled

Clean Vision’s wholly owned Clean-Seas diverts unwanted plastic waste ­­from landfills and oceans and converts it to clean, non-fossil, eco-fuels and commodities

Clean-Seas is building its proprietary global ‘Plastic Conversion Network’ with plans capable of converting each million tons of unwanted plastic waste into 134 million gallons of clean burning fuel

With an abundance of unwanted plastic waste, a growing number of agreements, and existing and planned processing facilities in strategic global locations, Clean Vision is positioned for very impressive growth

Precedence Research reports the global plastic waste management market is predicted to surpass $59.24 billion by 2030 from $36.96 billion in 2021

Clean Vision market cap is under $6 million with share price just under 2 cents

Mass production of plastics, which began just six decades ago, has accelerated so rapidly that it has created 8.3 billion metric tons—most of it in disposable products that end up as trash.

Jenna Jambeck, a University of Georgia environmental engineer who specializes in studying plastic waste in the oceans says, “8 million metric tons of plastic ends up in the oceans every year. That is the equivalent to five grocery bags of plastic trash for every foot of coastline around the globe. Gaining control of plastic waste is now such a large task that it calls for a comprehensive, global approach, Jambeck says, that involves rethinking plastic chemistry, product design, recycling strategies, and consumer use.”

?Plastic manufacturing has doubled roughly every 15 years and has outpaced nearly every other man-made material. Unlike virtually every other material, half of all plastic manufactured becomes trash in less than a year.

Clean Vision Corporation (CLNV: OTCQB) has come up with a brilliant strategy through its wholly owned subsidiary, Clean-Seas of collecting and converting unwanted plastic waste into fossil-free, clean fuels. The company has created a network called the ‘Plastic Conversion Network’ for the purpose of scaling up their efforts to convert plastic waste into clean energy on a global level. The impact on the global plastic waste crisis could be dramatic, and the profits for Clean Vision and Clean Seas could be enormous. Take a look at the surprisingly large numbers of fuel that can be created from plastic waste on the following illustration.  Each million tons of plastic waste can be converted into 134 million gallons of clean burning fuel.

Landfills Don’t Want Most Plastic Waste but Are Forced to Take It

In 2016, the U.S. exported 16 million tons of plastic, paper and metals to China. In actuality, 30 percent of these mixed recyclables were ultimately contaminated by non-recyclable material, were never recycled, and ended up polluting China’s countryside and oceans. An estimated 1.3 to 1.5 million metric tons of plastic found its way into the ocean off China’s coast each year.

In 2018, China’s National Sword policy banned the import of most plastics and other materials that were not up to new, more stringent purity standards. The U.S. then sent its plastic waste to other countries, shipping 68,000 containers to Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand in 2018. When these countries later instituted bans on imported plastic waste, the U.S. diverted its waste to Cambodia, Bangladesh, Ghana, Laos, Ethiopia, Kenya and Senegal — countries with cheap labor and lax environmental rules. The U.S. still ships over 1 million metric tons a year of plastic waste abroad, often to countries already overwhelmed by it. Experts estimate that 20 to 70 percent of plastic intended for recycling overseas is unusable and is ultimately discarded. One study found that the plastic waste exported to Southeast Asia resulted in contaminated water, crop death, respiratory illnesses due to toxic fumes from incineration, and organized crime.

Clean Visions’ Clean-Seas Wants Global Plastic Waste

Clean-Seas installs and operates pyrolysis facilities around the world to convert plastic waste to clean fuels. Without Clean Seas, this plastic waste would otherwise end up in landfills, or incinerated, or in our oceans.  Large volumes of tonnage of  waste plastic per day is planned to be converted to usable products such as low-sulphur fuels, and the company’s branded AquaHtm clean hydrogen.

During the next 6 months, Clean Vision, through their Clean-Seas subsidiary expects to be initiating operations in Agadir, Morocco, while gaining final permits and securing land for new facilities in Puerto Rico, Brittany, France, Sri Lanka and Istanbul, Turkey. Clean Seas has recently announced partnerships to develop PCN facilities in Morocco, France, Puerto Rico, Turkey, and Sri Lanka. It has also announced its up and running facility in Hyderabad, India in a partnership with the Indian Institute of Chemical Technology (IICT). 

Clean-Seas expects to be expanding operations throughout India and South Asia in 2023 and gaining additional projects under agreement and permitting in the United States.

2023 will also see the launch of Clean Visions’ wholly owned subsidiary, EcoCell.  EcoCell has secured the exclusive worldwide license to develop and manufacture hydrogen-based fuel cells for global distribution. The Company believes that hydrogen fuel cells will play a large part in the growth of the clean energy industry allowing for 24 x 7 operation providing energy to the fixed base and mobile sectors. The only byproduct of a hydrogen-based fuel cell is water, so it is truly a clean energy solution for the future.

Additionally, Clean-Seas is developing clean-up programs at all of its operational facilities where it will educate and inform constituents about the global plastic waste crisis. A key differentiating factor however is that at any of these clean-up programs, most recently announced in Hyderabad under its Plastic Free Hyderabad program, and working with the Hyderabad marathon, Clean-Seas will not only pick up waste plastic but it will also demonstrate how it can be responsibly recycled into environmentally friendly fuels and commodities.

Conclusion

As of September 30, 2022, Clean Vision is trading at about $.017 that provides a market cap of about $5.63 million. Clean Vision is rapidly implementing Clean-Seas proprietary “Plastic Conversion Network” that has the potential to achieve very large scale because the need is mostly unmet and because it is so large. Each million tons of plastic waste can convert into 134 million gallons of clean burning fuel with a current wholesale value of about $420,000,000 and Clean-Seas is building a global network with planned production capabilities far beyond a million tons of plastic waste annually.

https://richardacavalli.wixsite.com/greenplanetmicrocaps/turn-waste-pastic-into-clean-fuel

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