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Historical Archive

This press release was originally distributed via the eWire press wire service (2002–2016). It is preserved here as a historical record.

March 25, 2004

CORRECTING and REPLACING ADVISORY/New Environmental Technology to Be Demonstrated That Allows Heavy Metals Products to Self-Remediate Through a Revolutionary Molecular

ARCHIVED 2002–2016: Originally distributed via the eWire press wire service. Preserved as historical record.

CORRECTING and REPLACING ADVISORY/New Environmental Technology to Be Demonstrated That Allows Heavy Metals Products to Self-Remediate Through a Revolutionary Molecular

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Business Editors/Environment Writers

CORRECTING and REPLACING ADVISORY/New Environmental Technology to Be Demonstrated That Allows Heavy Metals Products to Self-Remediate Through a Revolutionary Molecular

NEW YORK, NEW YORK, Mar. 22 -/E-Wire/Business Wire/-- WHO: Theodore Sall, Ph.D., consultant, along with Michael DeLuca, Vice President and Noel Spindler, Director of Technology for Solucorp Industries...

WHAT: will announce and demonstrate a new environmental technology that can make batteries (auto, cell phone, flashlights, hearing aids, etc.) fluorescent lights, circuit boards, solar cells, paint removers and paints, bullets and other metal-containing items self-remediating...

WHERE: during a news conference at the Harvard Club, 27 W. 44th St., in New York City...

WHEN: at 10:30 a.m. on Thursday, March 25, 2004.

Developed by Solucorp Industries, this technology, Integrated Fixation Systems (IFS), is designed to offer manufacturers added value for product safety by providing a system that eliminates contamination from heavy metals once the products are disposed, where - over time - the metals in the products leach and contaminate soil and/or water. This system was designed to render the metals "non leachable" or inert. This technology is based on a revolutionary molecular binding system.

The process has also spawned a paint remover that binds up lead found in old paint from the hundreds of thousands of bridges, factories, warehouses and water towers, as well as old homes where lead-based paints may have been used pre-1970.

Visuals will include:

-- A demonstration of how the process works - molecularly binding up metals

-- IFS coated products - bullets, shot, batteries, landfill liners and filters for smokestacks

-- An illustration of how the product would be used in paint removal, where contaminated paint chips that result would be non hazardous

If reporters would like to talk with the scientists who developed the technology, they will be on hand or available by telephone in advance.

Martin E. Janis & Company, Inc., Beverly Jedynak, [REDACTED-PHONE] ext. 12,

Cell: [REDACTED-PHONE] or Amy Ruffalo, [REDACTED-PHONE] ext. 15, Cell: [REDACTED-PHONE]

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