Processing Technology Selection
Processing Technology Selection — What Goes Inside The Claw?
Two companies have proven plasma gasification technology. Only one has ever operated at sea. This analysis determines the processing architecture for The Claw.
1. The Two Candidates
InEnTec PEM (Plasma Enhanced Melter)
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Origin | MIT Plasma Science & Fusion Center spinoff (1995) |
| Core tech | Plasma arc + molten glass bath |
| Deployments | 13 PEM units worldwide (all land-based) |
| Key model | G100P — 25 TPD at Columbia Ridge, OR |
| Max capacity | G550 — 125 TPD (licensed to Fulcrum BioEnergy, now bankrupt) |
| Energy recovery | Core design feature — produces hydrogen-rich syngas |
| Hydrogen output | 600–1,500 kg H₂/day from 25 TPD waste |
| Marine experience | None. Zero. No publications on marine deployment. |
| Byproduct | Synglass — vitrified, non-leaching glass |
| Employees | ~29 |
| Revenue | $1–5M/year on $230M total funding |
| Financial health | Precarious — near tax foreclosure in 2025 |
PyroGenesis PAWDS (Plasma Arc Waste Destruction System)
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Origin | Canadian defense contractor (1991) |
| Core tech | Plasma arc, no refractory, no molten bath |
| Marine deployments | 4 units on USS Gerald R. Ford-class supercarriers |
| Operational at sea since | October 2022 |
| Capacity | 5 TPD (200 kg/hr) |
| Marine certification | Lloyd's Register MED Type Approval |
| Energy recovery | No (shipboard variant burns syngas to exhaust) |
| Refractory | None — major weight and maintenance advantage |
| Startup | One-button, minutes to operational |
| Employees | ~107 |
| Revenue | CA$15.7M (FY2024), growing |
| Backlog | CA$54.4M |
| Torch range | 50 kW to 20 MW (largest commercial torch ever ordered) |
2. Head-to-Head Comparison
| Parameter | InEnTec PEM | PyroGenesis PAWDS |
|---|---|---|
| Ever operated at sea? | No | Yes — 4 units, 3+ years |
| Marine certification? | No | Lloyd's Register |
| Energy recovery? | Yes — core design | No (shipboard variant) |
| Refractory linings? | Yes (maintenance headache) | No (major advantage) |
| Molten glass bath? | Yes (incompatible with ship motion) | No |
| Throughput per unit | 25–125 TPD | 5 TPD |
| Hydrogen production? | Yes | No |
| Waste sorting required? | Minimal | Minimal |
| Startup time | Not specified | Minutes (one-button) |
| Dioxin/furan control | Controlled atmosphere | Immediate off-gas quenching |
| Unit cost (est.) | Not disclosed | ~$2.9M per PAWDS |
| Company stability | Fragile ($1–5M revenue, 29 staff) | Fragile but improving ($15.7M, 107 staff) |
3. The Third Option — PyroGenesis PRRS
PyroGenesis has a second product that solves the PAWDS energy gap:
PRRS = Plasma Resource Recovery System — waste-to-energy, not just waste destruction.
| Feature | PAWDS | PRRS |
|---|---|---|
| Primary goal | Destroy waste | Convert waste to energy + products |
| Energy recovery | No | Yes — syngas, electricity, steam, liquid fuels |
| Scale | 5 TPD | 1–100 TPD per module |
| Marine-rated? | Yes | Not yet |
| Maturity | Operational since 2011 | Design phase (European contract) |
| Existing deployment | Hurlburt Field, FL — 8.5 TPD, 420 kW output | Phase 1 design with European consortium (~$2M) |
4. The Decision Matrix
Scoring each option against The Claw's requirements:
| Requirement | Weight | InEnTec PEM | PAWDS | PRRS | Custom Hybrid |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marine-proven | Critical | 0 | 10 | 3 | 7 |
| Energy recovery (self-sustaining ship) | Critical | 10 | 0 | 10 | 10 |
| No refractory (maintenance) | High | 2 | 10 | 7 | 10 |
| No molten glass bath (ship motion) | Critical | 0 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
| Throughput scalability | High | 9 | 4 | 8 | 7 |
| One-button simplicity | Medium | 5 | 10 | 7 | 5 |
| Company stability | Medium | 3 | 6 | 6 | N/A |
| Cost certainty | Medium | 3 | 8 | 4 | 2 |
| Weighted Score | — | Low | Medium | High | High |
Why InEnTec PEM Is Eliminated
Three critical failures: 1. Never been at sea — no data, no publications, no interest shown 2. Molten glass bath — fundamentally incompatible with ship motion at sea 3. Refractory-lined — the #1 maintenance failure in plasma gasification, made worse by vibration
InEnTec's technology is real and works on land. But adapting a molten glass bath to a rolling, pitching vessel is an unsolved engineering problem that InEnTec hasn't even attempted. The risk is too high for Phase 1.
Why PAWDS Alone Is Insufficient
One critical gap:
- No energy recovery — The Claw must power itself from the plastic it processes. PAWDS burns the syngas and dumps the energy. Without energy recovery, the ship needs constant diesel resupply — destroying the self-sustaining concept.
Why PRRS or Custom Hybrid Wins
The optimal architecture combines:
- PyroGenesis plasma torches (marine-proven, 50 kW to 20 MW range)
- No-refractory chamber design (PAWDS principle)
- Syngas capture and recovery (PRRS principle)
- Gas engine/turbine power generation (proven marine technology)
- PRRS marinized — take the existing PRRS design and adapt it for shipboard operation, leveraging PAWDS lessons learned
- Custom hybrid — commission PyroGenesis to build a bespoke system combining PAWDS marine design with PRRS energy recovery
5. Recommended Architecture
Phase 1 — Proof of Concept (5 TPD)
| Component | Specification | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Processing unit | 1× PRRS-class module (marinized) or modified PAWDS with syngas capture | Proven torch, proven chamber, add recovery |
| Plasma torch | PyroGenesis APT (150–300 kW) | Same torch as naval PAWDS |
| Syngas recovery | Gas cleanup train → reciprocating gas engine | Jenbacher-type syngas engines are compact, marine-tolerant |
| Electrical output | ~0.7–1.5 MW from syngas | Powers all ship operations |
| Diesel backup | Yes — for startup and collection/transit | Until energy loop is validated at sea |
| Throughput | 5 TPD (200 kg/hr) | Matches PAWDS proven rate |
| Footprint | <100 m² processing + ~200 m² support | Fits on converted vessel |
Phase 2 — Validated Scale (10–25 TPD)
| Component | Specification |
|---|---|
| Processing | 2–5× parallel PRRS modules, or 1× scaled PRRS (custom) |
| Torch | APT-HP (200 kW–2 MW per torch) |
| Power generation | Gas turbine (higher efficiency at scale) |
| Electrical output | ~3–8 MW surplus |
| Diesel backup | Emergency only |
Phase 3 — Full Scale (50–100 TPD)
| Component | Specification |
|---|---|
| Processing | Multiple large PRRS modules or custom chamber with high-power torches |
| Torch | Custom 4.5–20 MW class (PyroGenesis has delivered both) |
| Power generation | Combined cycle (gas + steam turbine) |
| Electrical output | 10–25 MW surplus |
| Additional outputs | Fischer-Tropsch diesel, hydrogen extraction (Phase 3+) |
6. Energy Self-Sufficiency — The Core Loop
The Claw's operating model: collect plastic → plasma gasify → syngas → electricity → power the ship → collect more plastic.
Energy Balance at 5 TPD (Phase 1)
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Feedstock energy | 5,000 kg × 35 MJ/kg = 175 GJ/day = 48,611 kWh/day |
| System efficiency | 81% (ACS Omega 2024) |
| Turbine/engine efficiency | 30–35% |
| Electricity generated | ~13,800 kWh/day (~575 kW continuous) |
| Torch consumption | ~5,700 kWh/day |
| Pre-processing (shredder, dewatering) | ~1,500 kWh/day |
| Ship hotel load | ~1,000 kWh/day |
| Total consumption | ~8,200 kWh/day (~342 kW continuous) |
| Surplus | +5,600 kWh/day (+68%) |
Real-World Validation
The Utashinai plant in Japan (200 TPD, MSW feedstock) exported 54% of generated electricity to the grid — proving the energy loop at industrial scale. Ocean plastic has 2–4× the energy density of MSW, making the balance even more favorable.
7. Convergent Validation
Multiple independent groups have arrived at the same solution:
| Project | Approach | Plasma Source | Self-Powered? | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAWDS (US Navy) | Waste destruction on carrier | PyroGenesis | No (nuclear ship) | Operational since 2022 |
| SeaChange | Mobile ship + InEnTec PEM | InEnTec | Yes (syngas) | Pre-operational |
| Ocean Saviour | 70m collection + processing vessel | PyroGenesis | Yes (syngas) | Design phase |
| Blue Diesel (WPI/WHOI study) | Hydrothermal liquefaction on vessel | N/A | Yes (480% surplus) | Published research |
| The Claw | Mobile processing ship | PyroGenesis (proposed) | Yes (syngas) | Concept |
8. Risk Register
| Risk | Severity | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| PRRS unproven at sea | High | Build on PAWDS marine lessons; diesel backup for Phase 1 |
| Wet/salty feedstock degrades syngas | Medium | Pre-processing dewatering; waste heat drying; 35% penalty already modeled |
| Tangled fishing nets jam shredder | Medium | Pre-sorting on collection deck; PAWDS shredder handles mixed waste |
| PyroGenesis financial instability | Medium | License technology + stockpile spares; don't depend on their survival |
| Electrode consumption in salt air | Low–Medium | Sealed torch housing; proven in salt-air naval environment |
| Syngas cleanup more complex than modeled | Low | Standard industrial scrubbing; HCl from PVC is manageable at 2–5% |
| Torch failure mid-ocean | Medium | Multiple parallel units; hot-swap capability; spare torches on-board |
9. The Recommendation
PyroGenesis is The Claw's technology partner. InEnTec is eliminated.
The path forward:
1. Phase 1: Commission PyroGenesis to build a marinized PRRS module (5 TPD) — combining PAWDS's marine-proven torch and no-refractory design with PRRS's syngas recovery architecture. Pair with a Jenbacher-type syngas gas engine for electricity generation.
2. Diesel backup for Phase 1 until the energy loop is validated at sea with actual ocean plastic feedstock.
3. Revenue from credits (plastic removal, carbon offset) — not from hydrogen or fuel sales. Energy powers the ship. Credits pay the bills.
4. Scale via parallel modules — add PRRS units as collection capability grows. Don't try to build one massive reactor.
5. Stockpile PyroGenesis spares (torches, electrodes) — the company is financially tight. Protect against supply disruption.
The technology exists. The marine precedent exists. The energy math works. The question is no longer if it can work — it's who builds it first.
Analysis compiled March 2026. Based on PyroGenesis PAWDS naval deployment data, InEnTec PEM specifications, PRRS European contract details, Utashinai energy balance data, ACS Omega 2024 plasma gasification study, and Blue Diesel PNAS 2021 thermodynamic analysis.