Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Three companies win Elon Musk-funded award

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Apr, 2022 04:45 PM
  • Three companies win Elon Musk-funded award

VANCOUVER - Three Canadian companies with carbon capture technologies have won $1 million each from entrepreneur Elon Musk's foundation.

The University of British Columbia says in a news release that its spinoff company Carbin Minerals has been awarded a so-called XPrize for technology that removes carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

Carbin Minerals co-founder Bethany Ladd says they've developed research to speed up the regular process of rocks absorbing greenhouse gas from thousands of years to weeks or even days.

The university says another spinoff company called Takachar, which won the student version of the XPrize last year, will receive an additional $1 million this year for its plans to convert crop and forestry waste into fuel or fertilizer.

Planetary, a Dartmouth, N.S.-based firm, says it will use its prize money to scale up its technology for removing and storing carbon in the atmosphere, which also creates renewable fuel and restores some of the damage already caused in ocean ecosystems.

The XPrize was given to 15 companies in several countries on Earth Day in an annual competition to accelerate breakthroughs in removing carbon from the atmosphere.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Google to create android applications in Indian languages

Google to create android applications in Indian languages
Google Wednesday said it will host a two-day workshop in Bangalore later this week focused on designing and creating android applications in Indian languages.

Google to create android applications in Indian languages

Indian Mars Orbiter completes 100 days in space

Indian Mars Orbiter completes 100 days in space
India's maiden Mars Orbiter spacecraft completes 100 days Wednesday cruising through interplanetary space in its voyage towards the red planet.

Indian Mars Orbiter completes 100 days in space

Human arm sensors are here

Human arm sensors are here
In a novel bid to make future robots understand human movement better and act more efficiently, researchers have created human arm sensors - a first.

Human arm sensors are here