News Release

Up to 20 million euros for Munich Catalysis research cooperation

Sud-Chemie AG and Technische Universitaet Muenchen reach agreement on strategic alliance

Business Announcement

Technical University of Munich (TUM)

Munich Catalysis Agreement Signed

image: Technische Universitaet Muenchen President Professor Wolfgang A. Herrmann (left) and Dr. Günter von Au, Managing Board Chairman of Süd-Chemie AG, at the Nov. 29, 2010, signing of the "Munich Catalysis" master agreement. Süd-Chemie AG and Technische Universitaet Muenchen have formed a strategic alliance for catalysis research, "Munich Catalysis." In addition to basic research, a major aspect of this cooperation will be development of innovative catalysts to help meet the rising global demand for energy and base chemicals. Süd-Chemie is to sponsor this research with up to two million euros per year; the agreement, with an initial term of ten years, is to be extended if successful. view more 

Credit: Technische Universitaet Muenchen

Süd-Chemie AG and Technische Universitaet Muenchen (TUM) have formed a strategic alliance for catalysis research, "Munich Catalysis." In addition to basic research in the field of catalysis, a major aspect of this cooperation will be the development of innovative catalysts as a key technology to help meet the rising global demand for energy and base chemicals on a long-term basis. Süd-Chemie is to sponsor this research work with up to two million euros a year. The cooperation is based on a master agreement concluded for an initial term of ten years, which, if successful, is to be extended beyond this period.

Activities are due to start before the end of the year under the name "Munich Catalysis. Alliance of Süd-Chemie and TUM." Based on an industry-on-campus concept, TUM scientists will be working together with researchers from Süd-Chemie on central issues involving both basic and applied research in the field of chemical catalysis.

In addition to developing innovative catalysts and preparation methods, research will focus on identifying new ways of manufacturing basic chemicals, one of the key topics being the inert gas carbon dioxide. Among other things, the possibilities for efficiently separating this omnipresent so-called greenhouse gas from power plant processes and reusing it in chemical production cycles are to be explored, for instance as a synthesis module in the manufacture of energy sources or other base chemicals. Attention will also center on new ways of creating high-grade intermediate products for plastics, so-called olefins, without using oil.

Catalysis is seen as a vital technology for industrial materials conversion processes in the 21st century. Catalysts make it possible for most chemical products to be manufactured using low-energy and resource-sparing processes. They also play an essential role in promoting the targeted replacement of oil as a primary resource for the chemical industry by assisting in the manufacture of chemical products based on alternative resources, such as natural gas, coal or renewable (biogenic) raw materials.

This strategic cooperation will play an important role in the TUM´s overall strategy of bundling university research activities in the field of chemical catalysis. The research alliance is to be integrated into a new central institute for catalysis research set up by the TUM (Catalysis Research Center, CRC). As from 2012, it will be housed in the new CRC building currently under construction on the TUM campus in Garching. The CRC bundles the TUM´s broad scientific spectrum in the field of catalysis research with focus on industry-related research.

"The overriding goal envisaged by Munich Catalysis is to develop key catalytic technologies on a sustainable basis which – in view of the limited fossil resources and a continuing rise in the global consumption of energy and base chemicals – make the greatest demands on research alliances between university and industry," says the TUM´s President, Professor Wolfgang A. Herrmann. "As an entrepreneurial university, our research activities pursue the path of innovation to the stage of technical realization. In the field of catalysis, we have selected Süd-Chemie since this partner has a globally successful catalyst business."

Upon signing the agreement, Dr. Günter von Au, Managing Board Chairman of Süd-Chemie AG, said: "Chemical catalysis is a key technology and will be making a major contribution to the development of economically and ecologically sustainable ways of manufacturing fuel and chemicals in times when resources are in increasingly short supply. This pioneering venture is a means of bundling our numerous scientific cooperation projects with the TUM in the field of catalysis research based on a future-oriented and highly efficient industry-on-campus concept. In this way, we will continue to strengthen the TUM´s academic base in this high-potential sector, while also achieving a sustained improvement in Süd-Chemie´s innovative strength."

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Contact:

Süd-Chemie AG
Corporate Communications
Patrick Salchow, Jochen Orlowski
Tel. +49 89 5110-250, -247

Technische Universitaet Muenchen
Corporate Communications Center
Dr. Ulrich Marsch
Tel. +49 89 289 22778

Süd-Chemie AG (www.sud-chemie.com) is a publicly quoted (Security Identification Number ISIN: DE0007292005; WKN: 729200) specialty chemicals company headquartered in Munich, Germany and operating on a worldwide scale. Key markets served by its Adsorbents Division include the consumer goods, packaging and foundry industries, as well water treatment. Products manufactured by the Catalysts Division offer solutions for the chemical, petrochemical and refinery industries, for energy storage and hydrogen production, as well as off-gas purification. The common denominator of all Süd-Chemie products and services is the efficient and sparing use of natural resources to enhance the quality of life for humans and the environment. The Süd-Chemie Group generated revenue of EUR 1.072 billion in 2009, approx. 85% of this outside Germany. On 30 September 2010, the Group employed 6,494 people in its 80 sales and production companies worldwide.

Technische Universitaet Muenchen (TUM) is one of Europe's leading universities. It has roughly 460 professors, 7,500 academic and non-academic staff (including those at the university hospital "Rechts der Isar"), and 25,000 students. It focuses on the engineering sciences, natural sciences, life sciences, medicine, and economic sciences. After winning numerous awards, it was selected as an "Elite University" in 2006 by the Science Council (Wissenschaftsrat) and the German Research Foundation (DFG). The university's global network includes an outpost in Singapore. TUM is dedicated to the ideal of a top-level research based entrepreneurial university. http://www.tum.de


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