Industrial Process Economics Reports About Glycerol Glycerol, also known as glycerin, is the simplest triol and can be found in all natural fats and oils as fatty esters and is an important intermediate in the metabolism of living organisms. Glycerol is used in nearly every industry. It is mainly uses in drugs and oral care products. It is also used in tobacco processing and urethane foams, in foods, and cosmetics. Glycerol derivatives include acetals, amines,
Understand
esters, and ethers.
Glycerol
The Intratec portfolio (www.intratec.us/our-portfolio) includes reports examining specific Glycerol
production costs
production processes. Each report presents one-time costs associated with the construction of an industrial plant and the continuing costs associated with the daily operation of such a plant. General
Coverage of Glycerol Process Economics Reports Each report examines one specific Glycerol production process, including: AN INTRODUCTION TO GLYCEROL * Description & applications * Production pathways diagram PROCESS TECHNOLOGY THOROUGH UNDERSTANDING * Product(s) generated & raw material(s) consumed * Physico-chemistry highlights * Industrial site production capacity definition
Know the capital investment required
* Detailed process block flow scheme & description * Key process input & output figures (including raw material(s) consumption) * Labor requirements CAPITAL INVESTMENT BREAKDOWN * Total fixed capital required (ISBL, OSBL and contingency) * Working capital * Costs incurred during industrial plant commissioning and start-up * Multi-regional fixed capital analysis PRODUCTION COST DETAILED LOOK * Manufacturing variable costs (raw materials and utilities required) * Manufacturing fixed costs (e.g., labor and maintenance costs, operating charges, plant overhead)
Examine the
* Depreciation and corporate overhead costs
operating costs &
* Production cost history (4-year timeframe)
raw materials
PROCESS ECONOMICS QUICK SUMMARY TABLE
consumption
LABOR WAGE RATES AND PRICING BASIS REFERENCES & ANALYSIS METHODOLOGY