Knowledge Base

PRRS — Plasma Resource Recovery System Deep Dive

Final High Research 3,711 words Created Mar 4, 2026

PRRS (Plasma Resource Recovery System) — Exhaustive Deep Dive

Research date: 2026-03-03 Purpose: Complete technical profile of The Claw's chosen processing technology — PyroGenesis's waste-to-energy plasma system. Status: This is the selected technology direction for The Claw. Everything here matters.


1. What PRRS Is

PRRS = Plasma Resource Recovery System. It is PyroGenesis Canada's waste-to-energy system. Unlike PAWDS (which only destroys waste), PRRS captures the syngas output and converts it to electricity, heat, and liquid fuels.

Think of it this way:

  • PAWDS = plasma trash incinerator (waste goes in, nothing useful comes out)
  • PRRS = plasma power plant (waste goes in, electricity + fuel comes out)
For The Claw, which must power itself from the plastic it collects, PRRS is the relevant technology. PAWDS proved plasma works at sea; PRRS adds the energy recovery that makes self-sustaining operation possible.

How It Relates to Other Knowledge Base Entries

DocumentRelationship
PyroGenesis PAWDS Deep DivePAWDS = the marine-proven predecessor. PRRS builds on the same torch technology.
Plasma Gasification ProcessThe underlying science. PRRS is a specific commercial implementation.
SyngasPRRS's primary output. Syngas composition, downstream uses.
Energy BalanceThe energy math. Does PRRS produce more energy than it consumes?
Processing Technology SelectionThe decision document that chose PRRS over InEnTec PEM.

2. The Two-Step Process

PRRS uses a proprietary two-step plasma gasification process. This is fundamentally different from PAWDS's single-step destruction.

Step 1: Primary Gasification — Graphite Arc Plasma Furnace

Unsorted waste is fed into a DC electric arc furnace using graphite electrodes. This is conceptually similar to the electric arc furnaces (EAFs) used in steelmaking — a proven industrial technology at scales of hundreds of tonnes per day.

How it works: 1. Waste enters the furnace from above 2. Graphite electrodes create a transferred DC arc — the arc passes directly through the waste and slag bath 3. The molten slag becomes a conductive pathway for the arc current 4. The slag acts as a resistive heating element — converting electrical energy to thermal energy with high efficiency 5. At temperatures above 1,500°C, all organic matter gasifies into CO and H₂ (syngas) 6. Inorganic matter melts and pools at the bottom as liquid slag and liquid metal 7. Slag and metal are periodically tapped from separate outlets

Why graphite electrodes matter:

FeatureGraphite Arc (PRRS)Refractory-Lined (InEnTec, AlterNRG, etc.)
Liner materialGraphite (no refractory bricks)Refractory brick/ceramic
MaintenanceElectrode replacement (consumable, planned)Refractory repair (unpredictable, expensive)
Ship motion toleranceGraphite is mechanically robustRefractory cracks from vibration/thermal cycling
Temperature uniformityArc directly heats slag bathHot spots near torch, cold spots elsewhere
Energy transferDirect (resistive heating through slag)Indirect (radiant/convective from torch plume)
Scale-up riskSimilar to industrial EAFs (well understood)This is the failure mode that killed AlterNRG, Europlasma, and Plasco
The absence of refractory is PRRS's single most important engineering advantage. Every major plasma gasification failure at commercial scale traces back to refractory degradation.

Step 2: Secondary Gasification — Air Plasma Torch (APT)

An Air Plasma Torch (APT) completes the gasification of any residual organic material in the syngas stream.

ParameterValue
Torch power200 kW (DC), standard APT
Plume temperature>5,000°C
Arc typeNon-transferred (torch self-contained)
Plasma-forming gasAir (no exotic gases)
Electrode life>1,000 hours continuous
The APT ensures complete destruction of tars, complex hydrocarbons, and any organics that survived the primary furnace. The result is a clean syngas stream of primarily CO, H₂, CO₂, and N₂.

Step 3: Rapid Quench

After secondary gasification, the syngas is immediately quenched with water from 1,100°C to below 100°C in less than half a second.

This rapid cooling is critical because dioxins and furans — the carcinogenic compounds that plague conventional incinerators — form in the 200–500°C temperature window. By quenching through this range in under 0.5 seconds, PRRS prevents their formation entirely.

Published test results (PyroGenesis Venice 2006 paper):

  • Dioxins/furans: 10x below air emission standards
  • Acid gases (HCl, HF): 300x below standards

Complete Process Flow

Raw waste (unsorted)
  → Feed system (hopper, conveyor)
  → Step 1: Graphite arc plasma furnace (>1,500°C)
      → Organic fraction → syngas (CO + H₂)
      → Inorganic fraction → molten slag + molten metal
  → Step 2: APT secondary gasifier (5,000°C)
      → Destroys residual tars/organics in syngas
  → Step 3: Water quench (1,100°C → <100°C in <0.5s)
      → Prevents dioxin/furan formation
  → Gas cleaning (HCl, H₂S, dust, heavy metals removed)
  → Clean syngas → gas engine/turbine → electricity
  → Waste heat → ORC → additional electricity
  → Slag tapping → vitrified aggregate (inert, non-leaching)
  → Metal tapping → recycled metal ingots

3. Technical Specifications

Throughput

ScaleCapacityNotes
Minimum module1 TPDSmall-scale / pilot
Standard module10–50 TPDMunicipal / industrial
Maximum module100 TPDLargest single module offered
Multi-moduleNo stated limitMultiple 100 TPD modules in parallel
For The Claw Phase 1 (5–10 TPD target), a single small PRRS module would suffice. Phase 2+ (50–100 TPD) would use a full-size module.

Operating Temperatures

LocationTemperature
Graphite arc furnace>1,500°C (slag bath)
APT plasma plume>5,000°C
Syngas pre-quench~1,100°C
Syngas post-quench<100°C
ORC waste heat capture90–150°C

Syngas Composition (Pilot Test Data)

From the 2009 IT3 paper "Validation of the Plasma Resource Recovery System (PRRS) Simulations":

ComponentPilot TestModel Prediction
CO20.6 ± 1.0%22.2%
CO₂5.4 ± 0.5%6.7%
H₂~15%
N₂~55% (balance)
Syngas production rate: 2.12 ± 0.2 standard cubic meters per kg of MSW fed.

Important caveat for The Claw: This data is from MSW (municipal solid waste). Ocean plastic (predominantly PE/PP) would produce different syngas composition — likely higher CO and H₂ content due to higher carbon and hydrogen content in plastics, and lower N₂ if oxygen-enriched gasification is used. No published data exists for PRRS processing plastic feedstock specifically.

Outputs

OutputDescriptionUse
SyngasCO + H₂ rich fuel gasGas engine/turbine → electricity
ElectricityVia ICE or gas turbine from syngasPowers the ship/platform
Steam/hot waterWaste heat recoveryProcess heat, preheating, ORC
MethanolSynthesized from syngas (planned for EU contract)Liquid fuel, chemical feedstock
Vitrified slagGlass-like solid from inorganic fractionConstruction aggregate, ballast
Recovered metalsSeparated from slag at tappingRecycling revenue

Feedstock Tolerance

Waste TypeHandled?
Municipal solid waste (unsorted)YES
Industrial wasteYES
Hazardous waste (liquid, solid, sludge)YES
Biomedical wasteYES
Plastics (all types including PVC)YES (patent addresses chlorinated plastics)
Wet waste (30–45% moisture)YES (modeled)

4. The Hurlburt Field Installation — The Only One Ever Built

Overview

The only PRRS installation ever constructed. Located at Hurlburt Field, a US Air Force base near Fort Walton Beach, Florida, home of Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC).

Key Facts

FieldDetail
Official nameTransportable Plasma Waste to Energy System (TPWES)
LocationHurlburt Field, Fort Walton Beach, FL
ClientUS Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC)
BuilderPyroGenesis Canada Inc. (turnkey)
Design capacity10.5 metric tonnes per day
Annual throughput~3,100 tonnes/year
Power output420 kW (via internal combustion engine on syngas)
Construction cost$7.4 million
ScopeFull turnkey: site preparation, building, infrastructure, equipment, environmental permitting
StakeholdersUS DoD, USAF Surgeon General, Canadian/Quebec governments, Gulf Power Company

Timeline

DateMilestone
Pre-2010Design and construction
Late 2010System becomes operational
April 26, 2011Official inauguration by AFSOC
June 2011Formal acceptance by USAF
May 2013Closed and sold at government liquidation auction

What It Proved

1. PRRS can process unsorted waste (MSW, biomedical, hazardous) at ~8.5 TPD 2. Syngas can power an internal combustion engine generating 420 kW returned to the base grid 3. A North American first: plasma gasification producing grid electricity from waste 4. Full environmental permitting was achieved (Florida DEP) 5. The system was accepted by USAF after formal evaluation

What It Didn't Prove

1. Long-term reliability — operated only ~2 years before closure 2. Net energy balance — the 420 kW is gross output; parasitic loads (torch power, fans, pumps, gas cleaning) are unknown. Was it net-positive? 3. Plastic feedstock — processed MSW, not plastic specifically 4. Marine operation — land-based only 5. Scale-up — 8.5 TPD is small; The Claw needs 10–100x more

The Closure — The Uncomfortable Question

Hurlburt Field was closed in May 2013 and the equipment auctioned. PyroGenesis has never publicly explained why. Their website still lists it as a reference project without mentioning the closure.

Possible explanations (unconfirmed):

  • 2013 federal sequestration — automatic budget cuts across DoD; many non-essential projects were cut
  • Operational issues — the system may have had reliability problems that aren't publicly documented
  • Cost overruns — operating costs may have exceeded the value of electricity generated
  • Technology demonstration complete — the USAF may have gotten what it needed (proof of concept) and had no mandate to continue operations
For The Claw, this matters. The only PRRS ever built ran for ~2 years and was shut down. We don't know if it was shut down because it worked (mission complete) or because it didn't work well enough. This is the single biggest uncertainty in the PRRS technology assessment.

Mitigation: Phase 1 of The Claw is specifically designed to validate the technology at small scale (5–10 TPD) before committing to larger investment. If PRRS doesn't perform, we find out during Phase 1, not after spending $200M.


5. Energy Recovery System

Electricity from Syngas

At Hurlburt Field, syngas was fed to an internal combustion engine (ICE) producing 420 kW. At larger scale, a gas turbine or combined cycle would be used for higher efficiency.

Engine TypeTypical EfficiencyBest For
ICE (reciprocating)30–38%Small scale (<5 MW), variable load
Gas turbine25–35%Medium scale (5–50 MW), steady load
Combined cycle (GT + steam)40–55%Large scale (>50 MW)
Fuel cell (SOFC)45–60%Future option, not yet proven on syngas at scale
For The Claw Phase 1 (5–10 TPD, ~1–3 MW electrical), a syngas-compatible ICE (Jenbacher, GE Waukesha) is the proven choice.

Waste Heat Recovery via ORC (Patent US 9,447,705)

PyroGenesis holds a US patent specifically on maximizing energy recovery from plasma gasification using an Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC):

ParameterValue
ORC operating temperature90–150°C
Working fluidR245fa (preferred)
Thermal-to-electrical efficiency~10%
Recoverable waste heatUp to 20% of total system energy rating
Heat sourcesTorch cooling (5%), chamber cooling jackets (15%), exhaust
Torch waste heatUp to 35% of gross power supplied to torch
Heat transfer fluidsWater (<100°C), ethylene glycol, thermal oils
Surface temperature≤60°C outer surface (IMO maritime regulation)
Key detail: The patent explicitly specifies the IMO 60°C surface temperature limit, indicating PyroGenesis designed this system with potential marine applications in mind from the start.

Energy Balance for Ocean Plastic (Theoretical)

Ocean plastic is a far better feedstock than MSW for energy recovery:

FeedstockCalorific ValueMoistureAsh/Inorganic
MSW (typical)~10 MJ/kg30–45%15–25%
Ocean plastic (PE/PP)~30–40 MJ/kgLow (pre-dried)<5% (salt, biofouling)
Rough energy balance at 10 TPD ocean plastic:

Energy FlowValue
Energy in feedstock10,000 kg × 35 MJ/kg = 350 GJ/day = ~4 MW thermal
Plasma torch input~0.3–0.5 MW electrical
Syngas energy (60–70% recovery)~2.4–2.8 MW thermal
Electrical generation (35% efficiency)~0.8–1.0 MW electrical
ORC additional recovery~0.05–0.1 MW electrical
Parasitic loads (pumps, fans, cleaning)~0.1–0.2 MW electrical
Net electrical surplus~0.5–0.8 MW
At 100 TPD:

Energy FlowValue
Energy in feedstock~40 MW thermal
Torch input~2–5 MW electrical
Syngas energy~24–28 MW thermal
Electrical generation~8–10 MW electrical
ORC recovery~0.5–1.0 MW electrical
Parasitic loads~1–2 MW electrical
Net electrical surplus~5–8 MW
Critical caveat: These are theoretical calculations. No PRRS has ever processed ocean plastic. The Hurlburt Field system's net energy balance was never published. Phase 1 exists to validate these numbers.


6. European Contract — Status and Significance

The Original Contract (July 2024)

FieldDetail
AnnouncedJuly 2024
ClientEuropean consortium (name confidential)
Phase 1 value~$2 million (EUR 1.3M)
Phase 1 scopeConceptual and preliminary design, feasibility, cost estimation
Phase 1 timeline~1 year (Q3 2024 → Q3 2025)
Phase 2 estimate$120–160 million (EUR 80–105M)
Phase 2 scopeFull construction of PRRS waste-to-energy facility
Planned outputsSyngas, methanol, electricity, heat, slag, metals

Current Status: ON HOLD

As of Q4 2024, the client lost its first-stage financing. The $2M was removed from PyroGenesis's reported backlog. The client is seeking alternative funding. The project is paused.

For The Claw: This is both bad news and an opportunity. Bad: it means PRRS still has no active large-scale project. Good: it means PyroGenesis would be highly motivated to partner on The Claw as their flagship PRRS project.

Other Recent European Contracts

ContractValueClientDateScope
Plastic waste processingEUR 379K (~$600K)Major EU environmental services co.July 2025Engineering + testing for non-recyclable plastics
Radioactive wasteUndisclosedEU nuclear decommissioning orgDecember 2025Design phase for low-level radioactive waste plasma furnace
The plastic waste contract is particularly relevant — it demonstrates commercial demand for plasma processing of non-recyclable plastic in Europe, driven by the EU's EUR 800/tonne levy on unrecycled plastic packaging waste.


7. Marinizing PRRS — What Would It Take?

PRRS is not marine-certified. Only PAWDS holds Lloyd's Register MED Type Approval. Putting PRRS on The Claw requires significant marine engineering work.

What Needs to Change

RequirementDifficultyNotes
Classification society approval (LR, DNV, ABS)High1–2 years of testing and documentation
MARPOL Annex VI compliance (air emissions)MediumSyngas combustion is cleaner than diesel; should pass
Ship motion tolerance — graphite electrodesMediumMaintain electrode gap under vibration; damping mounts
Ship motion tolerance — molten slag poolHIGH>1,500°C liquid sloshing under wave motion. Never tested.
Slag tapping at seaHIGHDraining molten material at >1,500°C on a moving vessel
Syngas handling (marine grade)MediumCO + H₂ gas is toxic and explosive; marine gas handling standards exist
Seawater cooling systemLowStandard marine engineering
Corrosion resistanceMediumSalt air, humidity, splash zone
Surface temperatures ≤60°CLowAlready designed into the ORC patent
Fire suppressionMediumStandard marine fire systems
Electrical safety (marine grade)MediumStandard marine electrical standards

The Two Big Unknowns

1. Molten slag under motion. The PRRS primary furnace maintains a pool of molten slag at >1,500°C that acts as the conductive pathway for the DC arc. On land, this pool is stable. At sea, even on a large ship, wave motion could cause:

  • Slag sloshing against furnace walls
  • Uneven heating as the conductive path shifts
  • Arc instability as the slag surface moves
  • Potential for slag to contact and damage electrodes
  • Hazardous conditions during slag tapping
A mobile processing ship (The Claw's chosen architecture) has more motion than a semi-submersible platform. However, an Aframax-class tanker in the relatively calm GPGP may have acceptably low motion.

Mitigation: Design a deeper, narrower slag pool to reduce sloshing. Use baffles. Operate in calm conditions (GPGP is relatively calm). Test at small scale first.

2. Electrode alignment under vibration. The graphite arc requires precise electrode spacing. Vibration from ship engines and wave motion could affect arc stability.

Mitigation: Vibration-damped mounting. Automated electrode gap control (standard in industrial EAFs). The 200 kW APT (Step 2) already works at sea on PAWDS — it's the primary furnace arc that's unproven.

The PAWDS-PRRS Hybrid Strategy

The optimal approach for The Claw may be to combine PAWDS marine engineering with PRRS energy recovery:

ComponentSource
Marine-grade enclosure, mounting, vibration dampingPAWDS design principles
No-refractory reactor designBoth PAWDS and PRRS share this
APT plasma torch (secondary gasifier)Identical technology in both systems
Syngas capture and gas cleaningPRRS design
Electricity generation (ICE on syngas)PRRS Hurlburt Field proven
ORC waste heat recoveryPRRS patent
One-button operation, rapid start/stopPAWDS proven feature
Classification society certificationPAWDS has Lloyd's; extend to PRRS variant
This is exactly what the Processing Technology Selection decision document recommends: a marinized PRRS module incorporating PAWDS marine design principles.


8. Competitive Landscape — Why PRRS Over Alternatives

The Plasma Waste-to-Energy Graveyard

The industry has a catastrophic track record at commercial scale:

CompanyProjectScaleInvestmentOutcome
AlterNRG / WestinghouseTeesside, UK2× ~50 MW~$1 billionTotal failure. Air Products wrote off $0.9–1.0B. AlterNRG receivership 2021.
EuroplasmaMorcenx, France150 TPD€50M+WtE failed. Pivoted to asbestos destruction only.
Plasco EnergyOttawa, Canada85 TPDCA$80M+Bankruptcy 2015. Never achieved sustained commercial operation.
InEnTecVarious USSmall scale$230M+ funding2 US plants closed due to technical issues. 13 systems deployed globally but mostly pilot/demo scale.
Sierra EnergyFort Hunter Liggett20 TPD pilotUnknownTesting began 2020; no published results since. Not plasma (blast furnace).
The common thread in every failure: refractory degradation at scale. Corrosion, thermal cycling, and mechanical stress destroy refractory linings. Maintenance costs spiral. Uptime collapses. Economics fail.

Why PRRS Is Different

PRRS uses graphite electrodes in a transferred arc configuration — no refractory. The graphite electrodes are consumable (planned replacement), not structural. The slag pool IS the reactor lining (it solidifies on the walls as a protective skull).

This is the same principle used in electric arc steelmaking, which operates worldwide at scales of hundreds of tonnes per day with high reliability.

Head-to-Head Comparison

FeaturePRRSInEnTec PEMSierra FastOxAlterNRG
Refractory-freeYESNoN/A (blast furnace)No
Marine-related techYES (PAWDS)NoNoNo
Max throughput/module100 TPD125 TPD2,000 TPD (claimed)250 TPD (never achieved)
Proven at seaRelated (PAWDS)NoNoNo
Net power (per TPH MSW)420 kW at 8.5 TPD1.0–1.4 MW (claimed)Not publishedNever operational
H₂ productionPossible from syngasYES (1,500 kg/day)PossibleNever operational
Operational status1 closed installation13 systems (mostly pilot)1 pilot (no results)DEAD
PCB destructionNot specified99.99999999%Not specifiedN/A
Company statusFragile ($3M cash)Private, 29 employeesPrivateReceivership

InEnTec — Why It Was Eliminated

InEnTec PEM was the other serious contender. It was eliminated because: 1. No marine experience whatsoever — never been on a ship 2. Refractory-lined — the #1 failure mode in plasma gasification 3. Molten glass bath — 1,400°C liquid glass would slosh catastrophically under ship motion 4. SeaChange partnership stalled — the one marine concept using PEM has been dormant since 2020 5. Tiny company — 29 employees, no manufacturing capability for marine-grade systems

Full analysis: Processing Technology Selection


9. Patents and Intellectual Property

Confirmed PRRS-Related Patents

PatentTitleFiledGrantedKey Coverage
US 9,447,705 B2Method to maximize energy recovery in waste-to-energy processMar 2012Sep 2016ORC waste heat recovery, IMO surface temp compliance, chlorinated plastic handling
CA 2,830,289 A1Canadian equivalentSameSame coverage
EPO (number unknown)Three Step Ultra-Compact Plasma System for High Temperature Treatment of WastePre-2010GrantedCompact waste treatment for ships and isolated communities

Key Patent Claims (US 9,447,705)

This patent is particularly relevant to The Claw:

1. ORC energy recovery from plasma gasification waste heat (90–150°C range, R245fa working fluid) 2. Heat capture from torch cooling — recovers up to 35% of torch power input 3. Processing chlorinated plastics — rapid spray cooling with filtration prevents dioxin/furan formation when processing PVC 4. IMO maritime compliance — surface temperatures ≤60°C, designed for marine application from the start 5. Modular heat exchanger bypass — maintains system reliability if ORC fails

Total Patent Portfolio

PyroGenesis holds 54+ patents (issued and pending) across all technology lines. PRRS-specific patents are a subset, but the torch technology (APT, APT-HP) and gas cleaning technology patents also apply.


10. Financial Considerations

What PRRS Costs

ItemCostBasis
Hurlburt Field (10.5 TPD, turnkey)$7.4MActual cost (2010)
European PRRS (large scale, Phase 1 design)~$2M2024 contract
European PRRS (large scale, Phase 2 construction)$120–160M2024 estimate
Per-TPD cost (Hurlburt)~$700K/TPD$7.4M ÷ 10.5 TPD
Per-TPD cost (European, est.)$1.2–1.6M/TPDAt 100 TPD

What The Claw Would Need

PhaseScaleEstimated PRRS CostNotes
Phase 15–10 TPD$5–10MSmall module, marinized. Plus design/engineering $2–5M.
Phase 250 TPD$60–80MFull module
Phase 3100+ TPD$120–160MBased on European estimate
These are equipment costs only. Ship conversion, collection systems, crew, and operations are additional.

PyroGenesis as a Partner

PyroGenesis would be highly motivated to partner on The Claw:

  • $3M cash, $9.2M working capital deficiency — they need contracts
  • European PRRS contract stalled — The Claw could be their flagship project
  • "PyroGenesis cleans up the Pacific Garbage Patch" = priceless publicity
  • $54.4M backlog provides some stability, but new large contracts are essential
Risk: PyroGenesis is fragile. Mitigation: license the technology, stockpile critical spares, hire key engineers if possible, design with standard components where feasible.


11. Honest Risk Assessment

What Is Proven

ClaimEvidenceConfidence
Plasma torches work at seaPAWDS on 4 USN carriers, at sea since Oct 2022HIGH
PRRS can process waste to syngasHurlburt Field, 8.5 TPD, ~2 years operationMEDIUM
Syngas can generate electricity420 kW ICE at Hurlburt FieldMEDIUM
Graphite arc furnace works at industrial scaleElectric arc steelmaking (similar principle)HIGH
No-refractory design avoids scaling failuresPAWDS has no refractory; EAFs have no refractoryHIGH
System handles unsorted wasteHurlburt: MSW + biomedical + hazardousMEDIUM
Dioxin/furan emissions controlledPublished test data (10x below standards)MEDIUM

What Is Unproven

QuestionStatusRisk Level
Net energy balance (energy out > energy in)?Never published. 420 kW gross, parasitic loads unknown.HIGH
Works with ocean plastic feedstock?Never tested. Different composition than MSW.HIGH
Molten slag stable under ship motion?Never tested at sea.HIGH
Long-term reliability?Only ~2 years at Hurlburt before closure.MEDIUM
Why was Hurlburt closed?No public explanation.MEDIUM
Can scale to 50–100 TPD?Design says yes; never built at that scale.MEDIUM
Electrode consumption rate?Not published for PRRS specifically.LOW
Methanol production viable?Planned for European contract; never demonstrated.MEDIUM

The TRL Assessment

Technology Readiness Level: TRL 6–7

  • TRL 6 = System demonstrated in relevant environment
  • TRL 7 = System prototype demonstrated in operational environment
Hurlburt Field demonstrated PRRS at TRL 7 for land-based MSW processing. But for The Claw's use case (marine, ocean plastic, self-sustaining energy), the TRL drops to TRL 4–5 — component validation in laboratory/relevant environment.

This is exactly what Phase 1 is designed to address. Phase 1 takes PRRS from TRL 4–5 to TRL 7 for The Claw's specific application.


12. What Phase 1 Must Validate

Based on the unknowns identified above, Phase 1 of The Claw must answer these questions:

#QuestionHow to Test
1Does PRRS produce net energy from ocean plastic?Process actual GPGP feedstock, measure all inputs and outputs
2What syngas composition does ocean plastic produce?Gas chromatography on syngas from plastic feedstock
3Can the slag pool operate under ship motion?Sea trials with instrumented reactor
4What is the electrode consumption rate with plastic?Track electrode wear during extended operation
5Can wet, salty plastic be pre-processed adequately?Rinse/dry test with actual GPGP samples
6What are the actual emissions from ocean plastic processing?Continuous emissions monitoring during sea trials
7Can the system achieve 90%+ uptime?Extended operation tracking
8Does PVC content create corrosion issues?Monitor HCl in syngas, inspect gas cleaning system
If Phase 1 answers these positively, PRRS is validated for The Claw. If not, we know before spending $200M.


Sources

PyroGenesis Official

Technical Papers

Patents

Contracts & News

Industry Context


Research compiled March 2026. Based on PyroGenesis public filings, technical papers, patent documents, USAF press releases, and industry analysis. All claims verified against multiple sources where possible. Unverified claims are flagged.