TPAC HAD A VERY SIMILAR SS AND RAN TO [color=BLUE]0064 ON JAN 6,2016[/color] this is just to prove how undervalued $HCTI
We are pleased to announce that Industrial Finishes & Systems has entered into a definitive exclusive national distribution agreement with Hybrid Coating Technologies (HCT) for several of HCT’s coating formulations. HCT has developed Green Polyurethane™, the first-ever modified hybrid polyurethane (currently used in coatings and paint) manufactured without the use of toxic isocyanates throughout the entire production process.
PLEASE NOTE THE EXTENSIVE LIST OF DISTRIBUTION CENTERS THIS COMPANY HAS. THIS DEAL IS HUGE AND BIGGER THAN WE ALL CAN IMAGINE
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 17, 2015 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Hybrid Coating Technologies Inc. (OTCBB:HCTI) is pleased to provide an overview of the significant milestones that have been achieved during this year.
Entered into $4M distribution agreement and received $160,000 preliminary order from US based distribution partner.
Finalized a joint development agreement in principal with a Fortune 500 partner for a potential revenue of $20M per annum and expect to execute a definitive agreement next month.
“We are presently working with five Fortune 500 companiesand are in discussions with several others as well as working with other large and medium sized companies and expect 2016 to be a significant year for the company as sales start to ramp up from various verticals.”
12/8/15 - Oleg Figovsky(inventor of Green Polyurethane) gives speech at eastern Michigan university https://www.emich.edu/univcomm/emutoday/index.php?id=1417_lecturesMeetings * TECHNICAL TALK ON NON-ISOCYANATE POLYURETHANE: The College of Technology is pleased to welcome Oleg Figovsky, a renowned scientist, entrepreneur and industry leader who will speak today, Dec. 8 from 2 - 3:30 p.m. in room 143 Sill Hall. Figovsky will lecture on Non-Isocyante Polyurethane - Synthesis, Structure and Applications Oleg in the states in early December? Just for the presentation? I think not. Connect the dots, follow the timeline.
HCTI's Green Polyurethane is heavily backed by the United States Environmental Protection Agency
Mary Cushmac, Ex-EPA Section Chief, joins Board of Directors on 8/27/15 About Mary Cushmac
Mary Cushmac has more than 30 years experience at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in the Design for the Environment (DfE) and the New Chemicals programs in the Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics. From 1997 until her retirement in 2011, she worked in partnership with the collision repair industry and career/technical schools to develop and promote best practices to reduce exposure to isocyanates during spray painting and related operations. Isocyanates – key chemicals in automotive and industrial coatings – are reported to be the leading cause of occupational asthma.
Ms. Cushmac played a major role in establishing and leading the Federal Spray Polyurethane Foam Workgroup with participation by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), the Agency for Toxic Substances Disease Registry (ATSDR) and the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). This work group initiated dialog with the Spray Polyurethane Foam Alliance (SPFA), the American Chemistry Council (ACC) Center for Polyurethanes Industry (CPI), and the polyurethane foam industry to promote health and safety best practices that reduce isocyanate exposures in spray polyurethane foam applications.
Ms. Cushmac was also a member of the advisory panel created to advise the North Carolina Division of Public Health and ATSDR on local communications issues related to the 2007-2010 public health study regarding isocyanate (TDI) emissions from a polyurethane plant in North Carolina.
Ms. Cushmac joined the EPA in 1980, serving as the New Chemicals Pre-notice Coordinator and later as a section chief. She chaired the work group that developed the TSCA Pre-manufacture Notification Rule Amendments published in 1995, and co-chaired the New Chemicals Program's Environmental Technology Initiative that developed the 1994 Automotive Refinishing Industry Isocyanate Profile, which outlines health and safety information on isocyanates and recommends engineering controls and protective equipment to reduce inhalation and dermal exposures.
Ms. Cushmac co-authored a discussion of the hazards associated with isocyanate exposures, best workplace practices, and safer alternatives in a section of the Handbook of Green Chemistry, Green Processes, Designing Safer Chemicals, published in 2014.
Prior to joining the EPA, Ms. Cushmac worked as a research chemist in food chemistry at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and published several articles on analytical methods for detecting toxins in food.
Ms. Cushmac received her undergraduate degree in chemistry at Trinity College in Washington, D.C. and a Master's degree in organic chemistry at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. She is a member of the American Chemical Society.