Alberta Ecotrust installs carbon-capture technology at non-profits
An assisted-living facility in central Edmonton is the first of four non-profit buildings across the province to be fitted with carbon-capture technology that aims to both reduce energy costs and decrease emissions.
The Alberta Ecotrust Foundation has installed a CarbinX unit in the Excel Society's Grand Manor on 97 Street NW. The unit, developed by Calgary's CleanO2, captures carbon dioxide emissions from heating systems and converts them into non-toxic potassium carbonate, or pearl ash, which can be used to produce soap and other cleaners.
"We know, as a charity, it's really hard to ensure that all of your dollars are going to your impact, because you have to support your operations at the same time," Mike Mellross of Alberta Ecotrust said at a ribbon-cutting ceremony at Grand Manor on March 21. "So anything that we could do to reduce the costs of groups like the Excel Society (while reducing emissions) is a win-win-win."
Mellross noted Edmonton's commitment to reducing emissions across the board through its Community Energy Transition Strategy and the need to empower everyone to take those steps.
"The carbon-capture concept at the urban scale became really important when we saw the city's modelling of how to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050," he told Taproot.
Through its carbon budget, the city is supposed to emit no more than 176 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent between 2022 and 2050, though it is behind on those targets.
Alberta EcoTrust plans to install three more CarbinX units, one at a Calgary non-profit and the other two in city facilities in Edmonton and Calgary. And it is looking at the potential to expand the Carbon Capture for Nonprofits program.