At a time when periods of market tightness continue to afflict the carbon dioxide (CO2) business – not just in North America and Europe but now evidenced as far away as New Zealand too – the drive is for continuous improvement and productivity, in addition to diversification of sources.
A more sustainable, efficient way of doing business is desired across industries and economies as a whole, with the world looking for new benchmarks in technology, practice, productivity and feedstocks to address the challenges and megatrends it faces.
These needs have become acutely apparent in the CO2 sector in the last decade in particular, such has been the uptick in demand for both CO2 and dry ice – and the exposure of the inherent fragilities in its supply chain.
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