After the worst
of the wind and rain had died down from Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, and people
began making their way back home, it became apparent that citizens of Texas and
Florida would have more worries. The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency disclosed that at least thirteen toxic
waste sites in Texas were flooded and damaged by Hurricane Harvey and another
forty-one Superfund sites were negatively affected. Legacy contamination includes lead, arsenic,
polychlorinated biphenyls, benzene and other carcinogenic compounds from
historic industrial processes. After
Hurricane Irma over six million gallons of wastewater reportedly flowed out to
the coast and the Key Biscayne aquatic preserve in Florida.
The communities
in Florida and Texas need clean-up like that offered by OriginClear, Inc. (OCLN:
OTC/PK).
The company’s Electro Water Separation (EWS) system can be used for
chemical-free water cleanup by municipalities, oil and gas refiners, or
pharmaceutical manufacturers among others.
First contaminated water is put through an Electro Chemical Reactor,
where electricity in small amounts helps concentrate and float oils and
suspended solids. The resulting sludge
is removed with a mechanical ‘rake’ from the water surface. The water is then put through a second
advanced oxidation step that oxidizes and reduces the few remaining
micron-sized suspended solids and dissolved contaminants. In demonstrations,
OriginClear claims delivery of 99.9% removal of dispersed oil, 99.5% removal of
suspended solids and successful treatment of specific chemicals such as
ammonia, phosphorus and hydrogen sulfide.
One of the
demonstrations completed by OriginClear is particularly interesting for
decision makers in Florida and Texas. In
2015, OriginClear used its system to treat floodwater at an industrial site in
Oklahoma. Floodwaters had invaded Prime
Conduit, an electrical manufacturing plant in Oklahoma City. The company sent its ‘crash truck’ with the
OriginClear system on board directly to the site. The mobile EWS unit is capable of treating 36
metric tons of contaminated water per day, with sufficient filter arrays to
meet municipal clean water standards.
The water was
laced with heavy metals and other contaminants, but the EWS delivered clear
water that was approved to be disposed directly into the Oklahoma sewer system
or used for beneficial use. The
treatment cost was less than the alternative solution, which was to soak up the
water and truck it to a hazardous waste disposal site.
The big success in Oklahoma City suggests the
OriginClear system has value in post-storm situations. Whether the company is in a good position to
deploy in an emergency is another question.
In the twelve
months ending June 2017, OriginClear reported $3 million in total sales,
resulting in a net loss of $11.5 million.
The company still needs cash resources to support operations. Cash burn was $1.3 million in the same twelve
month period. Unfortunately, the company
only had $274,560 in the bank at the end of June 2017. There is also debt on OriginClear’s balance
sheet -
$3.3 million in convertible, promissory notes.
The need for
cash to keep going and a weak balance sheet are not cornerstones of a good
foundation to seize market opportunity. We
note that since the June 2017 quarter ended, OriginClear completed a private
placement of common stock, raising $282,000 in cash. The company also used stock instead of cash
to pay for consulting services and salaries of some senior officers. The
issuance of new shares here, there and seemingly everywhere may solve the immediate
cash shortage but also awakens the dilution dragon.
It is a bleak
picture and all investors, even the most risk oriented sort, should think twice
about a long position in OriginClear. An
investment case involving storm reaction may also be invalid. Actually, the company has been focused on
cleaning up water used in industrial process or in treating micro-toxins at
municipal treatment plants or commercial bottling plants. Candidly, ‘poop storm’ aftermath has not been
a top priority for this cash-strapped company. Nonetheless, investors with an interest in the
field may still find the risks at OriginClear acceptable at the six penny stock
price.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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