Halifax-based developer of CO2-injected concrete wins multimillion-dollar prize
CarbonCure one of two winners in U.S.-sponsored contest tackling climate change
A Nova Scotia company that injects carbon dioxide into concrete — making it stronger while lowering its carbon footprint — has taken home a multimillion-dollar prize in a global competition aimed at tackling climate change.
CarbonCure Technologies is one of two grand prize winners of the NRG COSIA Carbon XPrize, which began in 2015, lasting three rounds over the course of 54 months, according to a news release on the company's website.
The goal of the competition was to create technology that converts CO2 emissions into valuable products. Other contenders had innovations like harnessing photosynthesis to convert carbon and transforming acid rock draining and CO2 emissions into a stable substance.
Each grand prize winner gets $7.5 million US, equivalent to about $9.4 million Cdn.
The other winner is Los Angeles-based UCLA CarbonBuilt, which also developed a technology that reduces the carbon footprint of concrete by injecting CO2 into the mixture.
CarbonCure's prize money will be put to use reaching the company's goal of reducing 500 million tonnes of carbon emissions annually by 2030, the company said in the release. It also plans to invest a portion of the funds into social equity initiatives.
The company's founder, Rob Niven, told CBC News the Carbon XPrize was worth the time and effort the company spent to win.
"Yes, the cash reward was very significant," he said in an interview from British Columbia.
"But what it would also do is create a catalyst for market recognition and credibility that would really propel our business forward. It's such a global high-profile award and being the nature of our business, being a global product and technology, it really felt like it was a great opportunity."
The use of CO2 in concrete is expected to become a $400 billion market, the company said in a release. Its concrete solution is currently used in more than 300 concrete plants around the world.
Annually, buildings make up 40 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, and the world's building stock is expected to double by 2060, according to Marcius Extavour, executive director of the Carbon XPrize.
"CarbonCure's solution for the concrete industry exemplifies XPrize's ideal innovation — it is effective, commercially viable, and scalable — and can make a real difference to climate change today," Extavour said in a release.
The competition had 38 contenders shortlisted in 2015. The final round was completed in Alberta in 2020, with CarbonCure introducing its newest tech: carbonating wastewater generated at concrete plans to produce concrete "with a reduced water, cement, and carbon intensity."
Employees at CarbonCure's main headquarters in Burnside, N.S., were chuffed by the win.
"I think it's incredible. It's a really hard-working team that went into developing the technology," said lead assembly technician Jordan Porter.
Technician Caitlyn MacDonald said employees were on a company-wide Zoom call when Niven shared the news.
"It was really exciting. Everyone was so happy," said MacDonald.
The company employs about 80 people and has plans to expand in Burnside where it assembles the CO2 injection units used at 300 concrete plants around the world.
The $20-million competition is sponsored by U.S.-based NRG Energy and industry group Canada's Oil Sands Innovation Alliance (COSIA).
With files from Paul Withers