Remediation with OSE II
Oil Spill Eater II (OSE II) is the world’s most environmentally safe and cost-effective bioremediation process for the mitigation of hazardous waste, spills and contamination virtually anywhere of any size, large or small. It is an environmentally safe oil spill clean-up & remediation method because it uses nature’s own bioremediation processes to effectively eliminate hazardous materials. OSE II is listed on the US Environmental Protection Agency’s National Contingency Plan for Oil Spills (NCP).OSE II is not a bacteria (bug), fertilizer or dispersant product. It is a biological enzyme that converts the waste into a natural food source for the enhanced native bacteria found in the environment. The end result of this process is CO2 and water.
OSE II will reduce your cleanup costs and permanently eliminate the hazardous waste problem in place, with no secondary cleanup required. Since 1989, OSE II has safely remediated numerous types of hazardous materials on the ground, in the ground and in the water, which is why it’s approved by countries all over the world.
Contaminants that OSE II handles include:
- Most organic-based compounds
- Most hydrocarbon-based compounds
- All types of gasoline
- Diesel fuel
- Numerous solvents
- Pesticides
- Crude oils, including Alaskan north-slope crude oil
- Zylene
- Toluene
- Ethyl benzene
- Chrysene
- Hopane
- Hexadecane
- Naphthalene
- Fluorene
- Phytane
- Phenanthrene
How and Why OSE II Destroys All Viruses
OSE II contains Bio Surfactants with anionic, cationic charges that break down oils/fats/lipids breaking a virus into pieces, destroying the virus. This means when you spray a surface, copper, wood, metal, cardboard, plastic, concrete, or painted surfaces with OSE II the lipid layer will dissolve and destroy the virus. The broken-down pieces of the virus will then be mobilized from the surface, and either absorbed in whatever is wiping the surface, and end up in the trash where the particles will further degrade. If the surface is washed down then the pieces of virus become even more dispersed, and decay completely over time.