Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Latest Xprize Offers $20 Million To Find New Uses For Carbon Emissions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Sep, 2015 12:40 PM
    CALGARY — Asking the public to "reimagine carbon," a group of oilsands companies is helping to launch a $20-million XPrize competition to find innovative ways to address carbon emissions.
     
    Dan Wicklum, chief executive of Canada’s Oil Sands Innovation Alliance, said the goal is to find practical uses for converted carbon emissions, rather than an outright reduction in carbon dioxide production.
     
    "The competition will promote and advance the discovery and development of new technologies to take carbon emissions, which are now seen as a liability, and change them into a resource, a valuable, usable product," Wicklum said at the public launch Tuesday.
     
    Calling climate change "one of the biggest challenges facing the planet," Wicklum said carbon emissions are a key contributor to the problem, and oilsands producers are part of that.
     
    "We're part of the global problem, but today is about taking a leadership role in becoming part of the global solution," he said.
     
    "Today we're throwing down the gauntlet, we are lighting a fire under the brightest minds in the world."
     
    Wicklum said that fossil fuels will continue to be a source of energy for years to come, so research needs to be done on both reducing emissions and on better managing the emissions that are produced.
     
    "Under any scenario, petroleum will be a part of our energy mix in the foreseeable future, so it just makes sense to work on reducing emissions, but also on the game changing technologies too. So it's a balanced approach."
     
    The competition runs for four and a half years and the winning team will be the one that converts the most CO2 into one or more products with the highest net value and the smallest environmental impact.
     
    Possible solutions listed by the organizers include new ways to make cement and other building materials, chemicals to make industrial and consumer goods, low-carbon transportation fuels, or entirely new products.
     
    Teams will be able to choose between capturing carbon emissions from a coal power plant or a natural gas facility.
     
    Several large-scale carbon capture projects have been or are being developed, but efforts so far to find uses for the captured carbon have been limited.
     
    Saskatchewan's government-owned utility, SaskPower, opened the $1.4-billion Boundary Dam carbon capture project last year, which it bills as the first commercial scale effort of its kind.
     
    Under the project, some of the carbon captured from a coal power plant is sold to the oil companies which pump it into the ground to increase the amount of oil companies can pump out.
     
    Royal Dutch Shell's Quest carbon capture project, the first for an oilsands project in Canada, will take carbon emissions from the Scotford Upgrader and pump it into porous rock two kilometres underground.
     
    The Carbon XPrize is being half-funded by U.S.-based NRG Energy, a utility that promotes renewable energy, and half by Canada’s Oil Sands Innovation Alliance, founded by 13 oilsands companies to find ways to reduce the environmental impacts of the industry. Only eight of the 13 COSIA member companies are taking part in this competition.
     
    The non-profit XPrize foundation, known for organizing high-profile research competitions like creating the first private space flight, will run the competition.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Winnipeg Man, Aaron Driver, Suspected Of Planning Terrorism Says Charter Rights Violated

    Winnipeg Man, Aaron Driver, Suspected Of Planning Terrorism Says Charter Rights Violated
    Leonard Tailleur is asking the court to determine whether federal authorities are being excessive in seeking a peace bond against his client, Aaron Driver.

    Winnipeg Man, Aaron Driver, Suspected Of Planning Terrorism Says Charter Rights Violated

    HOV Lane Violators Aware Of Rules, Just Hoping To Not Get Caught: Police

    HOV Lane Violators Aware Of Rules, Just Hoping To Not Get Caught: Police
    Ontario Provincial Police Sgt. Kerry Schmidt says motorists were pulled over for carrying fewer than three people in the specially marked lanes as the rules came into effect Monday.

    HOV Lane Violators Aware Of Rules, Just Hoping To Not Get Caught: Police

    Crowdfunding Campaign Launched To Pay Ottawa's Portion Of Road For Reserve

    Crowdfunding Campaign Launched To Pay Ottawa's Portion Of Road For Reserve
    The fundraising campaign, on Fundrazr.com, began Monday and quickly took off on social media, garnering support from author Margaret Atwood and others. In less than 24 hours it had raised more than $13,000.

    Crowdfunding Campaign Launched To Pay Ottawa's Portion Of Road For Reserve

    Beekeeper Gets Ontario Homeowner Out Of Sticky Situation By Removing 50,000 Bees

    Beekeeper Gets Ontario Homeowner Out Of Sticky Situation By Removing 50,000 Bees
    CAMBRIDGE, Ont. — A Cambridge, Ont., neighbourhood was abuzz as about 50,000 bees and 45 kilograms of honey were ripped from inside the walls of a house.

    Beekeeper Gets Ontario Homeowner Out Of Sticky Situation By Removing 50,000 Bees

    Walked Away From Tories Because Of Policy, Not Pay: NDP Leader Tom Mulcair

    QUEBEC — It was policy, not the paycheque, that prompted Tom Mulcair to walk away from an offer eight years ago to become an environmental adviser to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the NDP leader says.

    Walked Away From Tories Because Of Policy, Not Pay: NDP Leader Tom Mulcair

    Municipalities Will Follow Vancouver's Lead On Marijuana: Councillor

    Municipalities Will Follow Vancouver's Lead On Marijuana: Councillor
    Kerry Jang says he has heard from other municipalities, including Victoria, that are interested in using or adapting Vancouver's new bylaws to manage a recent spike in businesses selling medicinal pot.

    Municipalities Will Follow Vancouver's Lead On Marijuana: Councillor