AMI is pleased to announce the 3rd international conference on Green Polymer 91AV 2014. The event will take place from 18–20 March 2014 at the Maritim Hotel, Cologne, Germany. The conference will start with an evening welcome reception on the 18th March, followed by a 2-day technical and market programme.
The Green Polymer 91AV conference provides an ideal forum for today's market, as the polymer industry looks at alternatives to petrochemical sources to ensure a viable long-term future. Green Polymer 91AV 2014 is a forum to examine the latest developments in producing conventional polymers from sustainable sources including plants and biorefineries, algae, waste and CO2. What is the LCA and availablility of the alternative sources, and is there competition with food and bioethanol for automotive? What polymers are already available in the marketplace?
Green Polymer 91AV 2014 conference offers an excellent networking and sourcing opportunity for brand owners, environment and sustainability managers, business development and innovation professionals, chemical engineers, plastics manufacturers, agriculture specialists, biorefinery experts, biochemists, researchers, and suppliers to the industry to debate sustainable, economic solutions for polymer synthesis.
The Green Polymer 91AV conference provides an ideal forum for today's market, as the polymer industry looks at alternatives to petrochemical sources to ensure a viable long-term future. Green Polymer 91AV 2014 is a forum to examine the latest developments in producing conventional polymers from sustainable sources including plants and biorefineries, algae, waste and CO2. What is the LCA and availablility of the alternative sources, and is there competition with food and bioethanol for automotive? What polymers are already available in the marketplace?
Green Polymer 91AV 2014 conference offers an excellent networking and sourcing opportunity for brand owners, environment and sustainability managers, business development and innovation professionals, chemical engineers, plastics manufacturers, agriculture specialists, biorefinery experts, biochemists, researchers, and suppliers to the industry to debate sustainable, economic solutions for polymer synthesis.