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Canadian Carbon Tech Startup attracts US Interest Post-Trump

After Donald Trump was elected, a Canadian startup has reported an increase in inquiries from U.S. firms.

Deep Sky, a startup, recently finished construction of its "Alpha Direct Air Capture" test ground, in Alberta. It will allow 10 companies to fine-tune and deploy technologies as they work towards developing commercial-scale plants. Deep Sky CEO Alex Petre stated that due to the Trump administration’s decreased focus on climate and uncertainty regarding the future funding support of DAC technology in the U.S., Deep Sky has received more inquiries from U.S. carbon tech developers than they expected.

She said that the changes south of border has actually put Canada in the spotlight. Deep Sky, which was awarded $40 million by Bill Gates Breakthrough Energy last year, has signed agreements with eight companies from the U.S.A., Canada and the U.K. to operate on the site. The carbon removal process at the testing site, which will capture approximately 3,000 tonnes CO2 annually, is set to begin this summer.

DAC differs from more established technologies for carbon capture and storage. DAC is different from traditional carbon capture technology, which filters out CO2 at industrial smokestacks and stores it before it reaches our atmosphere. The technology is expensive and difficult to scale. Iceland's largest DAC plant, which is the largest in the world, can only capture 36,000 tonnes CO2 per year.

According to the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, stabilizing the climate of the planet could require removing DAC at a scale of millions or billions of tonnes per year by 2050.

The U.S. is facing a broader backlash from politicians against funding public technology for climate change.

The U.S. Department of Energy, under former president Joe Biden pledged over $1 billion of funding support to two proposed DAC Hubs in Texas and Louisiana. Sources told us in March that the Trump administration could eliminate the grant funding. Petre stated that Deep Sky plans to launch a commercial DAC project once the Alberta test hub has been fully operational. She expressed her encouragement at the new commitment of Prime Minister Mark Carney to identify and accelerate infrastructure projects that are in Canada's national interest, as part of an effort to make Canada a superpower for conventional and clean energy.

Petre stated, "There are many interesting developments that seem to be taking place (in Canada), which I believe will help us."

(source: Reuters)