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Construction starts on Alberta biofuels facility
 Enerkem Alberta Biofuels groundbreaking  
Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach, Edmonton Mayor Stephen Mandel, and Enerkem President and CEO Vincent Chornet participate in the ground-breaking ceremony.

 
Sept. 1, 2010, Edmonton – Enerkem Inc. held a groundbreaking ceremony on August 31, 2010, to signify the start of construction of a municipal waste-to-biofuels facility with its partners, the City of Edmonton and the Government of Alberta. Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach, Edmonton Mayor Stephen Mandel, and Enerkem President and CEO Vincent Chornet participated in the event.

Enerkem’s advanced biofuels plant in Edmonton, Alberta, will be the world’s first industrial-scale biofuels project to use municipal solid waste as feedstock. It will have an annual production capacity of 36 million litres (10 million gallons). Using Enerkem’s proprietary clean technology, the CAD $80-million facility will produce enough biofuel to fuel more than 400,000 cars/year running on a 5% ethanol blend. It will be built, owned, and operated by Enerkem Alberta Biofuels LP (www.edmontonbiofuels.ca), a wholly owned subsidiary of Enerkem. The City of Edmonton and Enerkem Alberta Biofuels have signed a 25-year agreement to convert 100,000 tonnes/year of the city’s municipal solid waste into biofuels. The garbage to be used cannot be recycled or composted.

“This groundbreaking marks the launch of a transformative project and leads the first wave of commercial-scale advanced biofuels plants in North America,” says Chornet.

“As a result of this facility, we [Edmonton] will become the first major city in North America to see 90% of its residential waste diverted from landfill by 2013,” says Mandel.

By replacing a portion of the petroleum fuels currently used and by avoiding the methane emissions created during waste decomposition in landfills, Enerkem’s advanced biofuels facility will reduce Alberta’s carbon dioxide footprint by six million tonnes over the next 25 years. The plant is scheduled to start operating towards the end of 2011.
 3D rendering  
 Three-dimensional rendering of Edmonton waste-to-biofuels facility.