SOLUCORP INDUSTRIES LTD
8-K, 1999-03-18
HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT
Previous: ADVANTA AUTOMOBILE RECEIVABLES TRUST 1997-2, 8-K, 1999-03-18
Next: COUNTRYWIDE HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST 1997 D, 10-K, 1999-03-18





                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


                                    FORM 8-K


                                 Current Report
                     Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the
                         Securities Exchange Act of 1934



       Date of Report (Date of Earliest Event Reported): March 18, 1999


                            SOLUCORP INDUSTRIES LTD.
             (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)



        Yukon                              0-29664           N/A
 (State or Other Jurisdiction of         (Commission     (I.R.S. Employer
  Incorporation or Organization)          File Number)    Identification Number)


         250 West Nyack Road, West Nyack, New York              10994
         (Address of Principal Executive Offices)             (Zip Code)


Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (914) 623-2333




(Former Name or Former Address if Changed Since Last Report)




<PAGE>


Item 5.  Other Events.

                  As previously  announced,  on May 1, 1998,  the Securities and
Exchange  Commission  suspended  trading  in  the  securities  of  Solucorp  and
initiated an  investigation  into various  matters  concerning the Company.  The
Company has cooperated fully with the SEC investigation, making available to the
SEC Staff all of the  Company's  documents,  producing  its  personnel for sworn
testimony, waiving its attorney-client privilege, and directing its auditors and
attorneys to cooperate  fully with the SEC Staff.  The SEC has not yet concluded
its investigation. However, as a result of the questions posed by the SEC Staff,
Solucorp  has  determined  to  issue  this  statement  repeating,  updating  and
clarifying certain disclosures previously made.

CURRENT MATERIAL CONTRACTS

                  At this time, the Company considers the following contracts to
be material to its business and operations:

                  As previously announced, the Company has a contract with Smart
International  Ltd.  ("Smart")  for  the  production  and  supply  of the  prime
ingredient in the blend of chemical  reagents  which  comprise the Company s MBS
remediation  technology for hazardous metals  ("Product").  Contracted supply of
Product has been in production since mid-1997,  utilizing whichever of the three
facilities in China are deemed appropriate by Smart for meeting supply criteria.
To date, all North American  requirements  have been fully satisfied,  and Smart
has stockpiled 2010 tons of Product for contemplated projects the United States,
Canada,  Scotland  and China  which  have the  potential,  in total,  to require
thousands of tons of Product.

                  As previously announced,  the Company also has granted Smart a
license to use the MBS  technology  for  contemplated  remediation  projects  in
China. Under the agreement,  as amended, Smart is to compensate the Company with
an annual license fee of $2 million dollars (commencing in mid 1997) and also is
to compensate the Company with a royalty based upon the tonnage of soil actually
processed.  Smart  and the  Company  have  been  actively  pursuing  a number of
remediation  projects  but, at this time,  no such  projects are in operation or
have been contracted.

                  As previously announced, the Company entered into an agreement
in 1998 with Geomar Holdings Limited, a newly formed company,  pursuant to which
Geomar  is to obtain  commitments  for  equity  and debt  financing  in order to
acquire,  remediate and develop certain properties  (Brownfields)  which require
remediation of contamination before they can be used. Under the agreement, among
other things,  Solucorp will provide and manage the remediation  effort and will
share in the revenues  generated from the redevelopment  effort.  Geomar and the
Company are actively seeking and assessing potential Brownfield Projects.


<PAGE>


                  As previously announced,  the Company signed a joint marketing
and operations  agreement with a major remediation  company in 1996. Since then,
on-going  support has been  provided by both  companies in the pursuit of metals
remediation  projects for the Company s MBS technology.  In July 1998, the first
contract  was  obtained  for  the  remediation  of up to  17,400  tons  of  lead
contaminated  materials at Weldon Springs,  Missouri.  This  sub-contract to the
Company,  which should generate  revenues of $325,000 if the full 17,400 tons is
remediated, is to be performed under the auspices of the Army Corp. of Engineers
(ACOE).  Performance is currently  scheduled to begin in April 1999, after being
delayed from the original  September  1998 start date.  The Company is currently
bidding  through the major  remediation  company for another  ACOE project at an
Army depot,  contracts for which have been temporarily postponed by the ACOE due
to its  funding  delays.  The  Company  and the major  remediation  company  are
discussing other opportunities for bidding on metals remediation projects.

                  As previously  announced,  in 1995,  Solucorp  entered into an
exclusive  licensing  agreement for marketing MBS in the United Kingdom,  with a
subsidiary of John Beech,  Ltd.,  under which Beech pays a small license fee and
is to pay  royalties  based  upon the  amount  of soil  remediated.  In order to
maintain  exclusivity,  however,  Beech had to remediate  soils to a value of $3
million  US for the  first  year and $6  million  thereafter.  Subsequently,  as
announced in 1997,  Beech and the Company signed an agreement in principle,  for
an  exclusive  license for the use of MBS in Europe,  under which Beech will pay
$6.4 million per year for ten years. The European license  agreement has not yet
been  finalized.  Beech and the  Company  have  pursued  and  continue to pursue
various  potential  projects  as  announced  by the  Company  but the  licensing
agreement  and the  agreement  in  principle  have not  resulted in  substantial
revenues to date.

                  As  previously  announced,  the Company  entered  into a joint
marketing  agreement  with IDM  Environmental  Corp.  ("IDM") in 1995 to jointly
pursue  projects  on which the MBS  technology  could be  applied  to  remediate
hazardous metals contamination of soils or industrial wastes. Although this long
relationship  with IDM has resulted in only one  relatively  small  project,  at
Egremont,   Massachusetts   in  1996,  IDM  was   instrumental  in  establishing
negotiations  for an MBS  license  in  Italy,  which  the  Company  is  actively
pursuing. The Company and IDM expect to continue seeking other projects.

                  As  previously  announced,   in  February  1999,  the  Company
received a  contract  which  will  generate  revenues  of up to  $1,000,000,  to
stabilize soil on site at the Central Artery project in Boston. Remediation work
at the site is currently in progress. As also reported, Solucorp believes it has
positioned  itself  to seek and  obtain  additional  work in the  future  on the
Central  Artery  project,  which ranks as one of the  largest,  most complex and
expensive highway construction projects ever undertaken.

                  As previously announced, the Company entered into a three year
contract  with the Doe Run Company,  in August  1996,  to establish an "in-line"


<PAGE>


process  to  remediate  hazardous  lead  slag  as it is  produced  at Doe  Run s
secondary  lead  smelting  facility.  This contract  generated  revenues for the
Company of approximately $700,000 during 1998.

                  As previously announced,  the Company signed an agreement with
a mid-western landfill, in October 1998, to conduct a three months pilot test of
the Company s technology for remediating  hazardous  slag. The agreement  states
that,  upon  successful  completion of the pilot test, it will be converted to a
one year  contract.  Phase one of the pilot test was  successfully  completed in
December 1998,  but  subsequent  phases have been delayed due to a disruption of
supplies of waste for  processing  resulting  from the fact that the  landfill's
supplier  company has been  acquired.  The Company was  verbally  advised by the
landfill on March 2, 1999,  that it expects the pilot phase of the  agreement to
begin again in the very near future.

                  As previously announced,  based on obtaining the first Special
Waste Protocol dispensation for a metals remediation technology from the British
Columbia  Ministry of the  Environment,  the Company  obtained a contract with a
multi-national  steel company,  in October 1998, to perform three aspects of the
remediation of a former manufacturing  facility in British Columbia, for a total
value of  $4,063,000  (Cdn).  The first aspect  involves the shipment by rail of
3000  tonnes of High  Hazard  Special  Waste to another  of the steel  company's
facilities  in Canada.  A test  shipment of 87 tonnes was made  successfully  in
February  1999,  and  production  loading of the material for  transport  should
commence  during March.  The second aspect  involves the on-site  remediation of
47,000  tonnes of Special Waste  contaminated  by zinc,  cadmium and lead.  Site
preparation has begun for this aspect,  and all heavy equipment is being readied
for  transport to the site during the week of March 15, 1999.  The third aspect,
transport and disposal of the  remediated  47,000 tonnes to a Non-Special  Waste
landfill, will conclude the contract.

                  As  previously  announced,  the  Company  entered  into a $1.1
million  sub-contract with Environmental  Waste Technology,  Inc., in June 1998,
for lead and asbestos  abatement  and the  demolition  of buildings  and storage
tanks on a site in Brooklyn,  New York.  Subsequent to the  commencement  of the
project in November 1998, additional work was identified which has increased the
value of the site work.

                  At this time, there are no other contracts entered into by the
Company  which the  Company  believes  to be  material.  The Company is actively
pursuing  other  projects,  contracts  and  relationships  which  likely will be
material if consummated.

PRIOR CONTRACT DISCLOSURES

                  During 1995,  Solucorp announced that it had signed a contract
with  IEM/Sealand,  Inc.  to  remediate  a minimum of 15,000 tons of heavy metal
contaminated  soils in Waterbury,  Connecticut.  The Company  projected that the
total  contract,  including  disposal,  would  generate  $1.85  million  Cdn. in
revenues.  As a result of later decisions made by the site's general contractor,
the Company only  remediated  3,800 tons of soil, was not allowed by IEM/Sealand


<PAGE>

to handle the disposal,  and generated revenues of $132,000 Cdn., as reported in
the Company's financial statements.

                  As noted above,  during 1995,  Solucorp  announced that it had
entered  into a joint  marketing  agreement  with IDM  pursuant  to  which  both
companies  undertook to generate a minimum of  $20,000,000  per year in revenues
for 5 years, utilizing the Company's MBS remediation technology. The contract is
still in force and the Company and IDM are still pursuing  certain  projects but
the revenues generated to date have not been significant.

                  Subsequently  in 1995, the Company  announced that it had been
issued a $50,000,000  contract by IDM to use the Company's MBS technology at the
Los  Alamos  National  Laboratory  site in New  Mexico.  Thereafter,  in various
disclosure  documents,  the Company listed the Los Alamos contract as one of its
material contracts.  During the SEC investigation,  the Company was advised that
the Basic  Ordering  Agreement  issued for IDM for Los Alamos  National Labs had
terminated. Accordingly, on August 11, 1998, the Company announced that it would
not be rendering  its  remediation  services for Los Alamos under the  Company's
contract with IDM.

                  In one disclosure document sent to shareholders, it was stated
that the Company had a $300 million  contract with IDM. This  statement does not
appear  anywhere else or in any press  release of the Company.  The Company does
not  know of any such  $300  million  contract.  The  same  disclosure  document
summarizes  the facts,  contained in an IDM  release,  which stated that IDM had
signed a letter of intent to provide treatment at a site in Massachusetts, using
the  Company's  MBS  technology,  and that revenues from the project could reach
$30,000,000.   The  Company   assumes  that  the  $300  million   figure  was  a
typographical  error  made  during  drafting.  The  error was  corrected  by the
statement  concerning the $30 million project.  It appears,  however,  that both
statements  remained in the final version of the  document.  With respect to the
project itself, IDM did not receive a contract.

                  During  1995,  the  Company  announced  that it had  signed  a
contract with LCM  corporation  to remediate  4,000 tons of copper bottom ash in
West Virginia  with  projected  revenues of $626,400  Cdn.  Although the Company
believes  that it  actually  remediated  1,500  tons,  the weight was denied and
Solucorp had to accept  payment for the 1,300 minimum  tonnage  specified in the
contract, resulting in revenues, as subsequently reported, of $111,000 Cdn.

                  During  1995,  the Company  announced  that it had  received a
contract from OENJ  Corporation to provide on site  remediation of 1,400 tons of
hazardous soil in Elizabeth, New Jersey projecting revenues of $349,650 Cdn. The
contract  actually called for OENJ to provide  Solucorp with hazardous  disposal
air-space at its landfill which Solucorp  estimated  would generate the revenues
projected.  During the SEC investigation,  it was discovered that the 1,400 tons
of classified hazardous soil had been disposed of by OENJ. This was announced by
the Company on August 11, 1998.

<PAGE>


                  During 1995,  Solucorp announced a contract with NWECNC,  Inc.
(Nature's  Way) to remediate  4,000 tons of  contaminated  soil in Buffalo,  NY,
projecting  revenues of $270,000  Cdn..  Solucorp did  remediate  3,900 tons and
billed Nature's Way but did not receive  payment.  Subsequently,  upon advice of
its  attorney,  Solucorp  settled the matter for  $100,000 US as reported in the
Company's financial statements.

                  As  set  forth  above,  Solucorp  has an  exclusive  licensing
agreement,  for marketing MBS in the United  Kingdom,  with a subsidiary of John
Beech,  Ltd., under which Beech pays a small license fee and is to pay royalties
based upon the amount of soil remediated.  The Company billed John Beech $50,000
for  license  fees  covered  by the  period  October 1, 1997 to October 1, 1998.
However,  because remediation  projects under development in the U.K. are taking
longer  to  finalize  than  anticipated,  Beech did not pay the  Company's  fee.
Accordingly,  the Company has reserved 100% against this $50,000 receivable. The
license fee of $50,000 for the period October 1, 1998 to October 1, 1999 was due
on  October 1,  1998.  Even  though  the  Company  believes  this fee is a valid
receivable,  the Company has chosen not to treat this fee as income  until Beech
pays the entire $100,000.

                  In 1996, the Company  announced  that,  through Beech,  it had
received a contract to perform  remediation  services in Glasgow Scotland,  on a
test basis, with respect to a proposed project potentially involving millions of
tons of soil. The on site test was successfully concluded and the MBS technology
was recommended  for the cleanup but the project has been repeatedly  delayed by
the lack of funding  available to Glasgow.  Recently,  however,  as announced on
January 8, 1999, the Company/Beech  were invited to attend a meeting in Scotland
to discuss a proposal to remediate and develop a specific  site. The meeting was
held and discussions are continuing.

                  During  1996,  Solucorp  announced  that  Beech  had  received
confirmation from Bullen Consultants, consultants on a project in Portugal, that
Bullen had  received a letter of intent  from the  government  of  Portugal  for
initial  study,  design and testing for a substantial  project in Portugal which
would include soil remediation. Bullen advised in 1996 that it had specified MBS
as the technology for the cleanup of the site's  contaminated soils. The project
was  delayed  and,  thereafter,  Bullen was  removed as the  consultant  for the
project. The Company has no current expectation of participating in this project
in Portugal.

                  During 1995, the Company  announced it had received a contract
for  $850,000,  through  its  Puerto  Rico  office,  with a San Juan  School  of
Engineers  for  training  2,000  students.  The Company  received  only  minimal
revenues  prior to the time its Puerto  Rico  employee,  who was to conduct  the
training, absconded with all of the documents, equipment and other assets of the
Puerto Rico office.  To date,  the employee  has not been  located,  Solucorp is
unable to find the  contract,  and the  current  management  of the  School  has
expressed  doubt  that the  contract  existed.  Solucorp  is in the  process  of
reconstituting  its Puerto  Rico  operation  but does not expect to receive  any
additional revenue from this contract.

<PAGE>

                  During 1996,  Solucorp announced that its MBS technology would
be used in a substantial  UN sponsored  hazardous  waste cleanup in Poland.  The
announcement  stated that  Solucorp's  partner,  AG  Environmental,  had advised
Solucorp  that  $345,000  had been  budgeted  to the  Company for on site tests.
Actually,  the $345,000 was budgeted for tests of three technologies,  including
MBS.   Tests  were   successfully   concluded   but  the  project  was  delayed.
Subsequently,  Solucorp was invited to  participate  in a new pilot program with
respect to the proposed  project  (essentially  a new test) but, in light of the
extensive costs involved,  Solucorp decided not to participate.  The Company has
no current expectation of participating in this project in Poland.

                  As noted above,  during 1996,  Solucorp  announced that it had
signed a  contract  with the Doe Run  Company  to  provide  in line  remediation
services at Doe Run's facility,  which, at the time, would result in revenues of
$2.1 million over three years. Thereafter,  in various disclosure documents, the
Company reported modifications to the contract and the expected revenues. In one
such  release in 1996,  the Company  stated that the  projected  revenues  being
reported  would be realized "per year, for three years  [emphasis  added]." This
was a  typographical  error which does not appear anywhere else in the Company's
disclosure  documents.  The Doe Run  contract is still in effect and the on line
remediation  is ongoing.  This  contract  generated  revenues for the Company of
approximately $700,000 during 1998.

                  As  previously  announced  and as noted  above,  Solucorp  has
several contracts with Smart  International,  Ltd. (in China) pursuant to which:
(1)  Smart  produces  for  Solucorp  a  key  component  of  the  chemicals  used
("Product"), and (ii) Smart has an exclusive license for remediation projects in
China pursuant to which Smart is to compensate the Company with a license fee of
$2 million per year and also is to compensate the Company with  royalties  based
upon tons of soil remediated.  In several instances,  Solucorp announced that it
had been advised by Smart that certain  projects  were about to be contracted or
to commence.  The Company has been advised by Smart, however, that two announced
projects  - Nan Yang  Iron Co.,  now  named  Pacific  Tinplate,  and Guang  Zhou
Reservoir- have been delayed until further notice by Chinese  authorities due to
funding  difficulties  which have  resulted  from  China s fiscal  and  currency
crisis.  Other projects which have been the subject of negotiations by Smart are
similarly  affected.  Thus, no royalties  have yet been paid as no projects have
been  started  in China  although  Smart is still  actively  pursuing  potential
projects.

                  With  respect to the Smart  license  fees,  as reported in the
Company's  financial  statements,  certain  amounts have been paid in cash,  and
certain larger amounts have been paid by offsets against money owed to Smart for
production of Product, some of which has been used in areas outside of China and
some of which is in  storage in China and  elsewhere.  In light of the fact that
Solucorp has recently begun  operations on several  significant  projects and is
involved in negotiations for others, Solucorp had been, and expects to continue,
shipping and using more of the Product.  The remaining accrued license fees from
Smart are considered by Solucorp to be a valid  receivable  which the Company is
confident will be paid in cash or additional  offsets  against  Product costs as
such Product is manufactured and used. PERSONNEL - JOSEPH S. KEMPROWSKI


<PAGE>


PERSONNEL - JOSEPH S. KEMPROWSKI

                  Joseph S. Kemprowski is a full time consultant to Solucorp and
works out of  facilities  provided to him by the Company at the  Company's  main
offices  in  West  Nyack,  New  York.  He is  the  husband  of  Arle  Pierro,  a
vice-president  and director of  Solucorp,  and the  brother-in-law  of Peter R.
Mantia,  President and a director of Solucorp (Ms.  Pierro and Mr. Mantia's wife
are sisters).

                  During the early 1990s,  when prior  management  was forced to
leave Solucorp,  Mr. Kemprowski became Chairman and CEO of the Company.  At that
time, the Company had minimal operations and the MBS technology was in the early
process of development.  Mr. Kemprowski and Ms. Pierro essentially  operated the
Company  during that time period and, as a result,  have been  recognized by the
Company as "founders" of the Company in its present form. Mr. Kemprowski and Ms.
Pierro both use the title "Founder" in addition to their other titles (Ms.
Pierro - Vice-President and Director; Mr. Kemprowski - Consultant).

                  During the middle 1990s, Mr. Kemprowski  stepped down from his
positions  with  Solucorp but  continued as  President of EPS  Environmental,  a
wholly owned  subsidiary  of Solucorp  through  which  almost all of  Solucorp's
business  is  conducted.  In late 1996,  he gave up his  positions  with EPS and
assumed his positions as Founder and Consultant with Solucorp.

                  Mr. Kemprowski is a key member of Solucorp's personnel.  He is
not an officer or director of Solucorp or any of its subsidiaries,  and does not
exercise any control in that regard, but he is available to senior management to
render  advice on a wide  variety  of matters as  requested,  particularly  with
respect to his  knowledge of the events which  occurred  during his tenure as an
officer and director.  He undertakes  such projects as may be assigned by senior
management  or as he may  conceive  on his own with the  concurrence  of  senior
management.  With respect to such  projects,  he often acts as the leader of the
Solucorp effort. His activities as a consultant have been significant factors in
the  development  by  Solucorp  of many of its key  relationships  and  projects
including the relationships  with Smart and with Geomar and the current Solucorp
efforts to develop and  commercialize  its patent  pending  Integrated  Fixation
System.

                  On December 8, 1994,  in a matter  unrelated to Solucorp,  Mr.
Kemprowski consented, without admitting or denying the allegations, to the entry
of an order in an SEC  administrative  proceeding  making  findings and imposing
sanctions [KEMPROWSKI, et al.; SEC Rel. No. 34-35058 (12/8/94)]. The order found
that during the period from 1988 to 1990,  Mr.  Kemprowski,  and a company  with
which he was  associated,  in  recommending  the  purchase  of  securities  of a
particular   issuer,   acted  as  brokers  without  being  registered  as  such,
disseminated false and misleading  information  prepared by the issuer, and made
their  recommendation  without  having a  reasonable  basis for such.  The order
barred  Mr.  Kemprowski  from  being  associated  with a company  engaged in the
securities  industry  but  provided  that,  after five years,  he could apply to
become so associated. The order did not bar Mr. Kemprowski from being an officer
or  director  or  otherwise  associated  with  any  public  company  not  in the
securities industry such as Solucorp.

<PAGE>


                                    SIGNATURE

         Pursuant to the  requirements  of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,
the  registrant  has duly  caused  this report to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereto duly authorized.



Date: March 18, 1999



                                                     SOLUCORP INDUSTRIES LTD.


                                                     By:    /s/
                                                        Peter Mantia, President




© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission