On March 13, 2009, BASF has started up a new plant for the insulation material Neopor® in Ludwigshafen, Germany. Neopor is an expandable polystyrene (EPS). The plant has a yearly production capacity of 90,000 metric tons and works with a new process based on extrusion. The insulating capacity of Neopor is up to 20 percent better than that of Styropor® (EPS), thus contributing to energy efficiency and the reduction of CO2 emissions. Annual market growth of five percent worldwide for polystyrene foams in construction applications expected The gray Neopor is the refinement of the classic insulating material Styropor. It contains special graphite particles that reflect thermal radiation like a mirror, thus reducing heat losses in houses. BASF customers foam the Neopor granules and process them into insulating panels and molded parts that are then used to insulate exterior walls, roofs and floors. Insulating materials made of Neopor not only meet the standards for passive house construction but they also save at least 30 percent of the energy needed to cool residential buildings in warm climates. New production process: extrusion Insulating materials made of Neopor are instrumental in lowering the energy consumption of poorly insulated old buildings. For example: an old multi-family residential building uses 21 liters of heating oil per square meter per year for heating energy. If it is insulated so that it then needs only five liters, the residents of an 80-square meter apartment in this building will save some 1280 liters of heating oil per year and reduce CO2 emissions by about 4090 kilograms. The energy needed to produce Neopor for this insulation – about 1000 liters of heating oil per 80 square meter of living space – is already recouped after the first heating season. BASF SE, Ludwigshafen, Germany |
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