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David Vs. Goliath:
Small-Cap Tech To Save Giant Coal
By James Stafford Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May
11, 2015
The Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) new mercury pollution
regulations that took effect last month opened the flood gates for a new
multi-billion-dollar energy industry that has investors scrambling to get in
on second-generation technology poised for massive revenue gains.
When the EPA measures to curb mercury pollution from coal-fired power plants
over 25 megawatts
took effect on 16 April, it wasn't only environmentalists who were
popping the champagne corks—technology companies specializing in mercury
remediation broke out the glasses as well.
After all, the new
regulations created a $2 billion-a-year, federally mandated business for
them virtually overnight. These Federal regulations add a further 28 states
to the 22 states who already have similar state-imposed mercury emission
compliance regulations.
This is a newborn industry that is only
going to get bigger—and fast. The 16 April EPA Mercury and Air Toxics
Standards (MATS)
require that all US-based coal- and oil-fired electric power plants
generating 25MW and higher reduce their mercury emissions by approximately
90%.
With compliance deferments awarded in 2014, approximately 25%
of the United States coal-fired plants operated by the power utility
industry are subject to compliance with the EPA mercury emission controls in
2015. But this is only the beginning.
By this time next year, 75% of
the rest of America's coal-fired plants are scheduled to come under strict
mercury emission regulations, while new limits are expected to be placed on
greenhouse gas emissions this summer as well.
In order for
coal-fired power plants to survive, they will have to find a way to comply
cost-effectively. This is where new second-generation mercury remediation
technology comes in to save the day.
Once investors realize the door
that was opened wide on 16 April, a number of small- and mid-cap plays will
suddenly seem like a good way to profit on the new regulations, including:
Advanced Emissions Solutions, Inc (OTCMKTS: ADES), Albemarle Corporation
(NYSE: ALB), Calgon Carbon Corporation (NYSE: CCC), Fuel Tech Inc (NASDAQ:
FTEK) and Midwest Energy Emissions Corp (OTCQB: MEEC).
The largest
first-generation emission control companies in this industry right now are
Federal Signal Corp. (NYSE: FSS),
Cabot Corp. (NYSE: CBT), Advanced Emissions Solutions, Calgon Carbon
Corporation and CECO Environmental Corp (NASDAQ:
CECE). But it is the
small-cap players here that will be undervalued, with some analysts
predicting share prices jumping by 15%-84%.
To many industry
analysts, the first-generation mercury emission technological solutions
missed the mark. Their activated carbon filtration technology was too
expensive, using up to $5-$6 million per energy generating unit (EGU) per
year. First-generation technology also missed the mark on coal ash, which
was destroyed in the carbon filtration process, but could be used as a cash
cushion to partly mitigate the costs of emissions control. When you consider
that re-selling coal ash to the cement and concrete industry is estimated to
bring coal plants $450 million annually in extra income, this loss is a
great one.
This brings us to the second-generation mercury emissions
control technology put out by smaller environmental services companies in
which investors are hustling to get in on the ground floor before stocks
start to soar.
One that stands out is
Midwest Energy Emissions Corp.
(MEEC), which burst onto this scene from obscurity in
collaboration with North Dakota University's Environmental Emission
Research (EERC) team, which has been researching clean coal technologies for
over 50 years.
Not only does MEEC's second-generation solution guarantee coal-fired power
plant compliance, but it appears to be the first to do so at 50% lower costs
than first-generation solutions.
The technological solution
developed by EERC and MEEC is a patented, cost-effective mercury capture
system for coal-fired units in the US and Canada that not only allows them
to meet EPA emissions stands for 90% reductions, but to exceed them. But the
real advancement here is economic: The technology can be implemented for
half the cost of its predecessors and at the end of the day, according to
university researchers and MEEC, it significantly reduces expensive wear and
tear on boiler systems.
From the perspective of the coal industry,
this second-generation solution could not come at a better time because it
will make compliance survivable and even economical. From the broader
perspective of the American economy, this is a win-win solution that allows
us to hang on to coal, but clean it up cost-effectively while in the
meantime, saving hundreds of thousands of jobs according to a recent
Heritage Foundation research report.
From a pure investment
perspective, EPA regulation strongly controls new entrants on this explosive
scene, but the credibility resounds most loudly with the upstart MEEC due to
its public-private partnership with EERC, which is one of the world's
leading developers of cleaner, more efficient energy and environmental
technologies and was designated by the EPA itself as the Center for Air
Toxic Metal (CATM).
That MEEC has already booked over $100 million
of revenue from leading U.S. Utility companies speaks volumes about the
potential of this technology.
Overall, this brand new multi-billion
sector is poised for overnight gains, with analysts predicting that the
industry will outperform the S&P broader market substantially during the
next two quarters, and beyond, as coal-fired power plants work towards
compliance.
Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Coal/David-V.-Goliath-Small-Cap-Tech-To-Save-Giant-Coal.html
By James Stafford of Oilprice.com
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