Calgary Herald

B.C. Centre for Innovation and Clean Energy to launch in fall with up to $105M in funding

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN For more news about the innovation economy, visit thelogic.co.

The B.C. Centre for Innovation and Clean Energy is launching this fall with $70 million in combined funding from the provincial government and Shell Canada. The federal government, meanwhile, will provide up to $35 million to support projects the centre leads.

The provincial government first announced its intention to create the centre, which will focus on commercial­izing B.C.'S clean technology, in September 2020 as part of its economic-recovery plan. It committed $35 million to the venture and formalized the funding in its 2021 budget.

The federal government promised to contribute $35 million in its budget, which included $17.6 billion for “green-recovery” spending. The federal funding will come from Natural Resources Canada's Energy Innovation Program.

Details of the funding were announced Friday by B.C. Premier John Horgan, Provincial Jobs and Innovation Minister Ravi Kahlon, federal Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough, an assortment of provincial and federal cabinet ministers, and Shell Canada president Susannah Pierce, whose company is now matching the federal and provincial commitment­s with a $35-million contributi­on toward the centre's creation.

Shell Canada, which did not respond to a request for comment prior to the announceme­nt, is working toward net-zero emissions by 2050.

“Investing in clean technology will lower emissions and increase our competitiv­eness. Government, labour, industry and academia are all focused on net zero. Investment­s like this are how we get there,” federal Natural Resources Minister Seamus O'regan said in a statement.

The new centre will be a member-based organizati­on, spanning people from government, academia and industry.

That aligns with B.C. Energy Minister Bruce Ralston's original vision for the project. “My personal inclinatio­n is to model it a bit on the digital superclust­er here in British Columbia,” with its tiered membership model, he said in an interview in early May, when plans for the centre were still in their infancy and the province's NDP government was developing a business plan.

Its hope was the centre would bring in innovators from the public and private sectors, and facilitate interactio­ns and research.

The centre will focus on clean fuels, renewable natural gas, low-carbon hydrogen and carbon capture, utilizatio­n and storage. “That's where it will start,” said Ralston. “It's not a closed list or anything like that.”

It will have a physical location, though the precise spot is yet to be determined.

“There are many communitie­s that would be well suited to host,” a spokespers­on from the energy department said in a statement.

The department expects to announce more details on the location and the centre's operation in the coming months.

The first priority, said Ralston in May, was to develop a business plan for the centre and then recruitmen­t.

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