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Carbon Direct, Varme Energy Partner on Canada’s First Waste-to-Energy with Carbon Capture Project

Carbon Direct, Varme Energy Partner on Canada’s First Waste-to-Energy with Carbon Capture Project

Carbon Direct, Varme Energy Partner on Canada’s First Waste-to-Energy with Carbon Capture Project

  • The Carbon Direct–Varme Energy partnership will deliver around 130,000 tonnes of biogenic CO₂ removal credits annually by 2030.
  • The Alberta Industrial Heartland (AIH1) facility will divert about 205,000 tonnes of municipal waste per year and permanently store more than 3.2 million tonnes of CO₂ over its 25-year lifespan.
  • Alberta’s regulatory framework assigns long-term liability for CO₂ storage to the provincial government, reinforcing durability and confidence in the carbon credits.

Canada’s Industrial Hub Enters the Carbon Removal Era

In a move that brings engineered carbon removal closer to large-scale deployment, Carbon Direct and Varme Energy have announced a partnership to commercialise removal credits from the Alberta Industrial Heartland AIH1 facility — Canada’s first waste-to-energy project with integrated carbon capture and storage.

Located northeast of Edmonton in Alberta’s major industrial corridor, the AIH1 project converts municipal solid waste into clean power while permanently storing captured carbon underground. The initiative integrates circular-economy waste solutions with firm, low-carbon energy generation, positioning Alberta as a front-runner in combining waste management and carbon removal under one system.

Engineering and Governance Integration

The facility is designed to divert approximately 205,000 tonnes of municipal waste annually and capture over 130,000 tonnes of CO₂ for permanent sequestration. Commercial operations are targeted for 2029, with credit deliveries expected to begin shortly before 2030.

AIH1 will connect to Alberta’s CO₂ transport network, utilising deep saline aquifers as storage reservoirs. Alberta’s regulatory framework mandates comprehensive monitoring and transfers long-term liability for stored carbon to the provincial government — an approach that bolsters permanence and investor assurance.

Situated within Alberta’s existing industrial infrastructure, including pipeline and sequestration hubs operated by Atlas and Wolf Midstream, the project leverages pre-built assets to reduce capital intensity. Over its 25-year operational life, AIH1 is expected to divert more than 5 million tonnes of waste from landfills, permanently store 3.2 million tonnes of CO₂, and deliver roughly 7 megawatts of firm, low-carbon electricity to the grid.

Market Positioning and Investment Outlook

For the voluntary carbon market, the collaboration introduces a rare combination of scientific credibility and commercial scale. Carbon Direct brings technical expertise and due diligence to the credit certification process, while Varme Energy leads project execution and strategic partnerships with Babcock & Wilcox and Worley Construction Canada.

The facility’s 130,000-tonne annual capture capacity places it among the largest commercial carbon removal projects under development worldwide. The companies are now advancing offtake discussions to bring high-quality bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) credits to market, appealing to corporates seeking verifiable, durable removals aligned with science-based net-zero pathways.

Varme Energy has structured financing around long-term offtake agreements and price stability frameworks familiar to Canada’s energy sector. This structure is designed to reduce market risk and ensure predictable cash flow over the project’s lifespan.

RELATED ARTICLE: JPMorgan Chase, Carbon Direct Launch Framework to Link Biodiversity with Carbon Markets

Implications for C-suite and Investors

For business leaders and investors, the AIH1 collaboration represents a model for integrated decarbonisation — combining waste management, renewable power generation, and permanent carbon removal. It reflects a maturing stage of the carbon markets, where durability and regulatory oversight are replacing speculative offsets.

The project’s reliance on existing industrial infrastructure reduces cost and execution risk compared with stand-alone CCS projects. At the same time, Alberta’s assumption of long-term CO₂ storage liability strengthens confidence in the permanence of the credits, an increasingly critical factor for institutional buyers and ESG-aligned corporates.

Still, execution challenges remain. The consortium must finalise engineering, permitting, and feedstock supply contracts, as well as secure bankable offtake agreements. Yet, its transparent structure and provincial regulatory backing position it as a credible example of industrial-scale carbon removal finance.

Global and Policy Relevance

The Carbon Direct–Varme Energy partnership provides a replicable template for other regions seeking to decarbonise existing industrial hubs without dismantling them. Its integration of waste-to-energy, carbon capture, and public oversight reflects how policy design and private investment can align to deliver measurable climate impact.

Globally, AIH1 underscores the shift from voluntary offsets to engineered removals that meet corporate and investor scrutiny under frameworks such as the SBTi and CSRD. It also demonstrates how regional industrial economies can transition toward net zero while maintaining economic productivity and employment.

Closing Outlook

The collaboration between Carbon Direct and Varme Energy marks a pivotal step in Canada’s industrial decarbonisation strategy. By combining waste management, firm renewable power, and permanent carbon storage within a robust regulatory environment, AIH1 is set to become a benchmark for the next generation of carbon removal infrastructure — one that turns local waste streams into durable global climate assets.

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