Newsletter Subscription
Global energy giant ConocoPhillips is evaluating the potential of Sydney-based Biosignal's [ASX: BOS] furanone technology following a non-exclusive agreement reached by the two companies.
ConocoPhillips, the third largest integrated energy company in the US, is looking for a solution to help prevent microbiologically influenced corrosion [MIC] in the company's oil and gas infrastructure. MIC is predicted to cost the oil and gas industry over $2 billion per year.
Biosignal's compound promises to prevent the corrosion - caused by micro-organism contamination - in a more environmentally friendly manner than the current alternative, which consists of bombarding the oil and gas with corrosive chemicals.
The compound is not a biocide, which aggressively kills micro-organisms. It is based on furanones, which prevents bacteria from communicating, which in turn stops corrosive biofilm from forming.
Last week, Biosignal announced that a undisclosed animal health company was also evaluating its products.
Australian Life Scientist Member Login
Beyond The Hybrid TV Card Norm 2008-08-26 15:29:00+10
Go Green with Kingston - Save the PCB, Save the World 2008-08-25 16:10:00+10
VIA Pico-ITX at the Heart of Modern Robots 2008-08-25 13:50:00+10
Fujitsu unveils winning formula for success with Intel® Centrino® 2 processor technology. 2008-08-25 12:42:00+10
Multimedia Technology & Herma Technologies announce new audience feedback solution from REPLY Systems. 2008-08-19 11:05:00+10


