Medicine Hat News

Carbon capture shifting from storage to use

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CALGARY It has been derided as an expensive excuse to burn coal. But now, carbon capture technology may be leading to new commercial uses that could end up in your mouth.

While business case questions have swirled over carbon capture and storage, companies are increasing­ly looking to turn emissions that would otherwise be buried in the ground into toothpaste, fish food and a range of industrial products like concrete and biofuel.

“Rather than say we’re capturing it just to store it, we’re actually going to turn it into valuable products,” said Steve MacDonald, CEO of Emissions Reduction Alberta.

“That’s where a bit of a renaissanc­e is happening.”

To help push the trend forward, the Alberta agency has put forward $35 million to find the best new uses for captured carbon.

A similar effort is underway by Canada’s Oilsands Innovation Alliance (COSIA), which has paired up with the XPrize Foundation to dangle $20 million in cash awards for teams trying to create commercial uses for carbon.

“It’s such a complex problem that no single sector, or it’s unlikely that one single technology, will solve that,” said MacDonald. “The challenge has always been that CO2’s a very stable molecule, so the thermodyna­mics of converting it are challengin­g.”

The potential may be big. A McKinsey & Company report last year done on behalf of the Global CO2 Initiative said that carbon products — especially in concrete, plastics, fuel, and carbon fibre — could be a market worth between US$800 billion and US$1.1 trillion by 2030.

The COSIA carbon challenge attracted close to 2,000 submission­s from around the world, said Paul Bunje, who leads energy and environmen­tal competitio­ns at the XPrize Foundation.

“This has struck a nerve,” Bunje said.

To provide a real-world testing ground, a lab will be bolted onto an Enmax natural gas plant outside of Calgary. The Alberta Carbon Conversion Technology Centre will later be available for other groups, but it will first test out products like CarbonCure’s enhanced concrete.

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