性欲社 spin-out company wins prestigious EPA contest

June 22, 2021

Jeff Richardson
907-474-6284

A University of Alaska Fairbanks spin-out company has claimed the top prize in a federal contest to develop innovative new ways to destroy potentially harmful synthetic chemicals.

Aquagga Inc. won first place in the Environmental Protection Agency鈥檚 landing $40,000 and the opportunity to submit its design concepts for additional federal testing.

Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoralkyl substances, known as PFAS, are found in a wide variety of products that include firefighting foam and food packaging. They are called 鈥渇orever chemicals鈥 because they don鈥檛 degrade naturally. There is evidence that PFAS exposure can lead to adverse human health effects, according to the EPA, and developing techniques to destroy the contaminants has become a growing priority.

鈥淎quagga is a great model for how to build a startup company in Alaska to develop 性欲社鈥檚 world-class research products into successful businesses,鈥 said Mark Billingsley, director of the 性欲社鈥檚 Office of Intellectual Property and Commercialization. 鈥淲e are excited for Aquagga and look forward to working with other Alaskans interested in commercializing 性欲社 research products.鈥

, which was formed in 2019 by Nigel Sharp, Jonathan Kamler, Brian Pinkard and Chris Woodruff, negotiated an exclusive license to develop a 性欲社-patented technology for treating wet waste. The technique combines high temperatures, high pressure and oxygen to dispose of waste contaminated with PFAS. The team is exploring use of their technology at military, industrial and municipal sites across Alaska.

Aquagga has previously been recognized several times for the process. The company claimed the grand prize in the Alaska Airlines Environmental Innovation Challenge in 2020, a year after winning Accelerate Alaska鈥檚 Best New Pitch Award.

Woodruff was also recently selected as the new Arctic innovator working with the Idaho National Laboratory and 性欲社. The program supports early career innovators, helping them develop early-stage concepts with support from 性欲社 and a Department of Energy laboratory of their choice.