What I find interesting is to go back to the science journals of the early-mid 1950's and see all the predictions concerning fusion reactors. Back then, they estimated they'd have fusion reactors working safely by the end of the decade! Kind of funny, really.
As for this waste-reprocessing technology, I think it holds great hope for the future. I can easily imagine these springing up at waste-disposal plants, at large farms, at food-processing plants, as companies catch on to it. One way to push companies to embrace the technology would be to provide tax incentives for re-processing their waste material into POL. In California, there is a law that if anyone (private home owner or business) generates electicity from wind or solar power, the power companies have to buy the excess from them. I prefer the tax incentive idea myself, as the free market generally is more effecient than government mandates at driving such fundamental changes in business. Energy independance of the United States would radically change the geo-political landscape. I've got to wonder: do we produce more tons of carbon-based waste products in this country than we use tons of carbon-based POL?