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Brookfield cement plant to be a leader in green technology



Published on July 15, 2010
Published on July 15, 2010
Harry Sullivan  RSS Feed
Topics :
Lafarge Canada Inc. , Scotia Fund for Clean Air , PLEASANT VALLEY , North America , Colchester County

PLEASANT VALLEY - A pilot project announced today by Premier Darrell Dexter will see the Lafarge cement plant become the first in North America to produce a lower-carbon cement.

The plant is to receive $670,000 in funding for the project through the ecoNova Scotia Fund for Clean Air and Climate Change.

"The funding allows Lafarge Canada Inc., to move forward installing new equipment to continue to make top-quality cement using fewer raw materials and reducing fossil fuel demands," said plant manager Scarth MacDonnell. "This initiative extends the life of the Brookfield quarry, reduces fossil fuel consumption and plant emissions and expects to reduce overall CO2 emissions by more than 70,000 tonnes a year."

To put that in relative terms, the project ultimately should reduce carbon output equivalent to making half of the Town of Truro carbon neutral, MacDonnell said. "So, it's a big, big scale thing ... and a first of its kind."

The announcement was part of an overall plan to commit $2 million in funding to climate change and clean air projects in five municipalities, including Colchester County and Truro, and five businesses.

Dexter described the program as an initiative that "... has put us on the path to reduce over 300,000 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions and another 204,000 tonnes of air pollutants..." while also helping to create more than 100 permanent jobs in the province.

"The renewable energy industry is a big opportunity," he said.

Josh DeCoste, an environmental engineer at Lafarge, said the company, through its trial efforts with producing a lower carbon cement, has already resulted in reducing CO2 emissions by 2,500 tonnes. But that is only the start, he added.

"Our ultimate goal? To replace a hundred per cent of our general-use cement in the market with these new types of low-carbon cements. By doing this, we reduce the environmental footprint of this plant by 76,000 tonnes of CO2 every year. That's equivalent, I'm told, to 10,000 cars coming off the road."

Of the total $2 million in commitments announced yesterday, the County of Colchester is to receive $60,825 towards construction of the new Tatamagouche library. That money will be used for green lighting and air-conditioning technologies.

As well, $138,457 has been earmarked for the Colchester Legion Stadium in Truro to install a system to recover heat from the existing refrigeration plant for heating the arena's floodwater. Part of the funds will also be used to replace the facility's existing boiler system and to install energy efficient ceiling systems.

The remaining portion of the $2 million will be used for projects in other parts of the province.

Comments

  • Username
    Debbie Adams Crawford
    - July 16, 2010 at 12:25:26

    I glad to hear of positive changes to our environment by companies as big as LaFarge. Government monies are needed to help make these changes possible...as far as the comment above, perhaps the powers that be could bring back the diploma RN program, and make it possible for more students to afford to go to Med School. Incentives could keep them here in the province.

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  • Username
    dave
    - July 16, 2010 at 08:23:13

    if it's such a great thing - let lafarge do it themselves. meanwhile the hospital closures continue....

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