Todays Latest Updates: 4 June 2026
Biobased chemicals: Germany. traceless® opened its first large-scale production facility in Hamburg-Harburg. At the facility, plant-based residues from the agricultural industry are processed into an innovative material that can be used as a natural plastic substitute. With the opening of the demonstration plant, the company has reached an important milestone in scaling up its material technology. traceless®’ patented technology relies on a special extraction process that utilizes natural polymers from plant-based industry residues without modification of their natural chemical structure. The resulting granulates are bio-based, home-compostable, and by definition not plastic. The material’s thermoplastic properties allow for further processing using standard industrial technologies. Link 04/06/2026.
Biogas: South Korea. EcoSimplex began commercial operation of its ECO-Hydrogen Station in Seoul, Korea, to produce hydrogen from biogas. The facility sources biogas from a local sewage treatment plant and processes around 4,000 normal cubic metres each day to generate around 500kg of hydrogen. This development is structured around three core pillars and aims to deliver 1,200 hydrogen refuelling stations nationwide, deploy 15GW of fuel cells for utility-scale power, and supply over five million tonnes of hydrogen each year. Link 04/06/2026.
Hydrogen: South Korea. US-based Utility Global is eyeing the first commercial deployment of its off-gas-to-hydrogen technology under a new partnership with South Korean industrial manufacturing firm Samjin E&I. Under the deal, the pair intend to install Utility’s H2Gen reactor in Daejeon to produce hydrogen for mobility, power generation, and industrial applications. The process used electrochemical reactions to convert water to pure hydrogen by using residual electrochemical energy in various industrial off gases and biogenic gases to drive water electrolysis without electricity, and concentrates carbon dioxide in off gases as a separate product stream enabling economic industrial decarbonization. Link 04/06/2026
Marine fuels: Japan NYK commenced a one-year long-term trial involving the continuous use of 100% biofuel on an NYK-operated car carrier. The initiative is designed to evaluate the fuel’s effects on the vessel’s equipment and verify operational safety under real-world conditions. Through this effort, NYK seeks to accumulate technical expertise that will support the broader use of high-purity biofuels and further accelerate efforts to reduce greenhouse gases. Link 04/06/2026.
Marine fuels: Singapore Novel Biofuels, ACTUAL, and the Government of Maharashtra recently announced a commitment of more than one million metric tons of biomethanol available from 2030 to serve global shipping lines seeking secure, long-term access to clean maritime fuel. The commitment establishes the largest contracted supply position on the India–Singapore Green Shipping Corridor, a route on which industrial-scale supply at this volume has until now been absent. Link 04/06/2026.
Posted: Thu 04 Jun 2026

