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Pathways Alliance's major project is a potential $16.5 billion carbon capture and storage network to be constructed in northern Alberta. [4] As of May 2024, the proposed CCS network aims to capture CO2 emissions from over 20 oilsands facilities in northern Alberta and transport them via a 400-kilometer pipeline to an underground storage hub near Cold Lake.
President of the Pathways Alliance, Kendall Dilling says the federal investment tax credit for carbon capture and storage projects, rolled out earlier this year, targets only a fraction of ...
WINNIPEG, Manitoba (Reuters) -Oil and gas companies have asked the Canadian government to design a tax credit to pay for 75% of the cost to build carbon capture facilities that will curb ...
The terms carbon capture and storage (CCS) and carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) are closely related and often used interchangeably. [3] Both terms have been used predominantly to refer to enhanced oil recovery (EOR) a process in which captured CO 2 is injected into partially-depleted oil reservoirs in order to extract more oil. [3]
The Alberta Carbon Trunk Line System is the largest carbon capture, utilization and storage system in the Alberta, Canada.The system, which cost 1.2 billion Canadian dollars, captures carbon dioxide from industrial emitters in the Alberta's Industrial Heartland and transports it to central and southern Alberta for secure storage in depleting oil reservoirs as part of enhanced oil recovery ...
Canada's highest-polluting province Alberta is moving forward on building a broad carbon capture and storage (CCS) industry, but progress still hinges on government funding and heavy emitters ...
The Alliance was launched by Canada and the UK at the COP23 climate summit in November 2017. Announcing the launch, Climate Action Network-Canada Executive Director Catherine Abreu said: "Canada and the UK are right to kick-start the Alliance, as science tells us that OECD countries need to phase out coal by 2030 at the latest”. [1] [7]
UBC Press. Winner of the Best Policy Book in Canada award of the National Policy Research Initiative, and shortlisted for the Donner award for best policy book in Canada. Recent publications. Bataille, C., Melton, N. and M. Jaccard, 2014, "Policy uncertainty and diffusion of carbon capture and storage in an optimal region," Climate Policy.