Proprietary Additive
EATplus®
Made of starch and other all-natural materials, EATplus® is
the world’s first 100% organic additive used in the paper
pulp food container industry. It enhances the mechanical properties
of fibers with a cross-linking mechanism. Fibers then turn resistant
to oil and water, even at high temperature, yet remain highly biodegradable.
No existing synthetic additive contains these features.
EATplus® does not require any expensive ingredients, helping
keep production costs low, and giving our products a very competitive
edge. We began development of EATplus® in 1997, and tested it
for commercial use in 2002.
Semi-mechanical Pulping System
The first step in the production process is to extract virgin cellulose
fibers from agricultural residues or plants with a short life cycle,
like sugar cane and bamboo. Such plant tissues are put into a semi-mechanical
pulping system, specially engineered to separate fibers with mechanical
actions instead of chemical means.
Absolutely chlorine- and sulfur- free, our unique pulping system
not only causes minimal environmental hazard, but also minimizes
costs by eliminating pollution charges and the need for expensive
chemicals.
Zero-emission Manufacturing Flow
Our innovative engineering design is used throughout the manufacturing
process, and our zero emission manufacturing technology recycles
all liquid and solid leftover into the pulping system. Therefore,
no organic or chemical waste is created at any time.

Patent-pending Forming Process
Our patent-pending forming process, which includes a compression
chamber and a mould apparatus make us pioneers in pulp packaging
technology.
The first patented process uses high air pressure to rapidly form
pulp products into shape, cutting the forming time in half. We are
also able to manipulate the pressure exerted throughout the process
to achieve optimum product quality. This second process increases
air flow to hasten the dehydration procedure, a major breakthrough
from the traditional process, which relies solely on pressure to
squeeze out moisture.
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