Everything about Changing World Technologies totally explained
Changing World Technologies (CWT), a privately held company, was founded in August 1997 by Brian S. Appel. CWT was started primarily to develop and commercialize the
thermal depolymerization technology, now referred to by the company as "thermal conversion process", as developed and patented by
Paul Baskis.
Brian Appel is now the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Changing World Technologies, Inc. (CWT) and its subsidiaries.
Paul Baskis, whose patents (primarily 5,269,947 - Thermal Depolymerizing Reforming Process and Apparatus) the company obtained rights to, was originally associated with CWT but has since left the company.
In 1998 CWT started a subsidiary, Thermo-Depolymerization Process, LLC (TDP), which developed a demonstration and test plant for the thermal depolymerization technology. The test plant was opened in 1999 in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
CWT’s subsidiaries and affiliate companies also include Renewable Environmental Solutions, LLC (RES), which was formed in 2000 as a joint venture between
ConAgra Foods and CWT to develop the processing of agricultural waste and low-value streams throughout the world. RES, now wholly owned by CWT, has the United States’ first operational commercial plant in
Carthage, Missouri, producing renewable diesel from agricultural and livestock wastes, principally waste from the
Butterball turkey processing plant in Carthage.
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