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Our goal at KemSynth is to provide industry leadership in chemical
engineering, research, and manufacturing. With corporate holdings
as diverse as oil refineries in Texas and Alaska, bio-research
facilities in Brazil and Peru, plastics firms in New Jersey,
and chemical research laboratories in New York, KemSynth is
making investments in the future of chemical innovation. Our
clients include a broad range of commercial and government contractors,
and KemSynth has become a proven partner in the development
of many immerging technologies.
Founded in 1989 by renowned chemical engineer Brad Hansen (formerly
on the board of Pharcom Inc.), KemSynth has grown from being
a simple chemical research firm, into one of the world’s
leading multi-faceted technology developers. Let us help you
prepare for tomorrow.
“Our goal at KemSynth is to provide technology leadership throughout
the world. As a young executive at Pharcom, I learned how to
overcome great obstacles and in a few short years, we have accomplished
amazing things. Stick around. There’s a lot more to come.” --
Brad Hansen, KemSynth CEO
Recent News
November 17, 2005
Malcolm Freeman, President and CEO of KemSynth Petroleum,
and William Kreisler, head of KemSynth Petroleum Research
and Development, are invited to attend a seminar in Washington
DC which is being sponsored by the US Senate Committee on
Developing Fuels. In his keynote speech, Freeman reiterated
KemSynth's commitment to researching and developing new fuel
technologies that would help reduce green house emissions
and help the United States achieve its goals of UN Greenhouse
gas emissions compliance within the next decade.
March 1, 2006
US government officials are monitoring the dangers that the Peruvian
Revolutionary War Council may cause to heavily invested infrastructure of companies like KemSynth,
which has invested several billion dollars in the Peruvian
economy. KemSynth holdings in Peru include several off-shore
oil and gas drilling ventures, millions of acres of plantations
which cultivate extracts used in plastics manufacturing, and
a research facility in Iquitos which gathers and analyzes
new organic compounds harvested from the Amazon rainforest.
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