The government of Alberta (Canada) is advancing the province’s global leadership in the circular economy by committing $58 million through Emissions Reduction Alberta (ERA) to projects across the province worth $528 million. Under the ERA’s
Circular Economy Challenge,
INCA Renewable Technologies (Kelowna, Canada) has been awarded a $10 million grant toward constructing and operating what is reported to be a first-of-its-kind commercial processing and manufacturing facility to process waste hemp stalk from hemp grown for protein and manufacture it into BioPlastics and BioCore — a core material that can be deployed instead of rainforest balsa wood and petroleum-based PET in wind turbine blades and marine cores.
In addition to these developments, INCA says processed fiber will be shipped to Indiana, where it will be manufactured into biocomposite prepreg and BioPanels for the automotive and RV industries (see “
INCA Renewtech to build advanced biocomposites manufacturing facility in Alberta, Canada”). INCA currently has commercialization partnerships with
Gurit (Wattwil, Switzerland and Bristol, R.I., U.S.), Toyota North America (Plano, Texas, U.S.) and Genesis Products (Elkhart, Ind., U.S.) and its customer Winnebago Industries (Forest City, Iowa, U.S.). Joint development agreements with Canadian- and U..S-based polymer producers are also under finalization.
“This funding will enable INCA Renewtech to significantly accelerate construction of our state-of-the-art hemp processing and composites manufacturing factory,” David Saltman, chairman and CEO, INCA Renewtech, says. “We will purchase waste straw from farmers currently growing hemp for plant-based protein and transform this renewable resource into advanced biocomposites for the automotive, marine, wind energy and consumer plastics industries.”
The Circular Economy Challenge projects support waste reduction, material and feedstock substitution, value recovery and reduction of the lifecycle environmental footprint of materials and products — producing high-quality fertilizer for farmers, recycling asphalt from roof shingles, sequestering carbon in concrete and novel plastics recycling are some examples of the
technology solutions receiving funding. Ultimately, these technology solutions can reduce the impacts of material production, processing and disposal. The innovations invested in will support industry competitiveness, new venture creation and economic diversification.
If successful, the projects will reportedly result in cumulative greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions of up to four million tonnes by 2050 — equal to offsetting the GHG footprint of 1 million homes. Circular Economy Challenge funding is expected to create 1,835 person-year jobs in Alberta and have a $350 million GDP impact in the province by 2025.
The investment aligns with provincial initiatives including the proposed Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) approach, the agricultural plastics recycling initiative and the Natural Gas Vision and Strategy’s goal to establish Alberta as a center of excellence for plastics diversion and recycling
“A more sustainable, diversified provincial economy requires using our resources more wisely, we need to think about waste as a resource rather than a cost,” Justin Riemer, CEO, Emissions Reduction Alberta, adds. “This investment in converting waste into other uses is going to make a real difference.”
Projects were selected through ERA’s competitive review process. A team of experts in science, engineering, business development, commercialization, financing and GHG quantification conducted an independent, rigorous, transparent review overseen by a Fairness Monitor.
Read: Plant tour: Avel Robotics, Lorient, FranceAll ERA funding recipients are required to produce a final outcomes report that is shared publicly for the broader benefit of Alberta, as well as other funding proposals. Funding recipients will be required to report on project outcomes, achievements and lessons learned including GHG reductions, job creation and other environmental, economic and social benefits.
All funding is sourced from the province’s Technology Innovation and Emissions Reduction (TIER) fund.