PyroGenesis’ plasma system commissioned at New Zealand refrigerant destruction facility
What happened
PyroGenesis was awarded a contract valued at approximately $6 million to design and build the SPARC system for the project. said its plasma-based SPARC system has been commissioned at New Zealand’s National Refrigerant Destruction Facility, which officially opened March 20. This matters for MRO & Site Consumables because fresh price movement and input-cost detail should reset bid assumptions, vmi/consignment terms, and negotiation guardrails with 6, 20, 100,000 as the clearest commercial anchors; expect minimum order changes
Buyer takeaway
For MRO & Site Consumables, treat this as a cost-boundary signal rather than just a headline; buyer assumptions may need refreshing before the next quote or award decision
Cost / money
Use this to refresh should-cost views and challenge any fast repricing. Keep the read-through directional unless the source itself provides hard commercial numbers
Supplier / commercial
Suppliers with fresh cost justification may push harder on reopeners, indexation, shorter quote validity, or pass-through language. Buyers should separate real drivers from negotiation posture
Safety / operations
The operational risk is indirect: tight budgets or repricing battles often reappear later as reduced slack, substitutions, or execution compromises that buyers then have to manage
What to watch
Watch for shorter quote validity, reopeners, pass-through requests, or attempts to reset pricing on the back of weak evidence
Key facts
- PyroGenesis was awarded a contract valued at approximately $6 million to design and build the
- said its plasma-based SPARC system has been commissioned at New Zealand’s National Refrigeran
- The facility is the first in the Southern Hemisphere designed to destroy up to 100,000 kilogr
- PyroGenesis was awarded a contract worth about $6 million to design and build the all-electri
