Aduro Clean Technologies Inc. (ADUR) announced Thursday that it's hit a significant milestone in the quest to make plastic recycling actually work at industrial scale. A major global firm that designs and licenses large-scale petrochemical steam-cracking facilities just finished pilot trials using Aduro's recycled oil, and the results look promising.
Here's why this matters: steam crackers are notoriously picky about what they'll accept as feedstock. They demand highly purified inputs, and most chemically recycled oils are frankly not up to the task. Those oils typically contain impurities that force producers into costly upgrading processes and extensive sorting operations. All of that adds up to higher feedstock costs, more plastic waste getting rejected, and a bigger environmental footprint than anyone wants to admit.
Aduro's Hydrochemolytic Technology apparently sidesteps this problem. The process produces cleaner, more saturated hydrocarbons with a lighter boiling range, which translates to oil that steam crackers can actually use without expensive post-processing. That's the kind of practical advantage that could matter a lot if you're trying to build a viable circular plastics business.
What Happened in the Trials
The testing took place in October 2025 at an established pilot steam-cracking facility somewhere in Europe. Aduro supplied hydrocarbon liquid derived from mixed waste plastics, including the usual suspects: polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene, PET, and polyamide.
The key detail here is that the Hydrochemolytic oil went directly into the pilot furnace without any dilution or additional pre-treatment. The facility evaluated it under multiple operating conditions, and it held up. According to the company, the oil's ability to meet strict steam-cracker feedstock standards without costly post-treatment represents important third-party validation of the technology and its potential role in circular plastics value chains.
This trial marks a meaningful step in Aduro's ongoing technology validation and market engagement efforts. The company plans to leverage these results to work with additional global partners, assessing feedstock quality, scalability, and potential integration pathways for its Hydrochemolytic Technology.
Building Toward Commercialization
Earlier this month, Aduro signed a non-binding Letter of Intent to acquire land, buildings, and related equipment at a brownfield industrial site in the Netherlands for 2 million euros. That's part of the company's demonstration plant program, which is advancing site selection across Canada, Europe, and Mexico.
ADUR Price Action: Aduro Clean Technologies shares were up 5.46% at $10.43 during premarket trading on Wednesday.