Coal TransAlta finds a use for its landfilled coal fly ash The flyash will include waste from TransAlta’s coal-fired generation activities near Edmonton, Alberta, which ended last year. Clarion Energy Content Directors 1.10.2023 Share (Ash-TEK fly ash production line. Credit: Ash-TEK) TransAlta Corp. and Lafarge Canada will repurpose landfilled fly ash to replace up to 25% of the cement used in concrete manufacturing. The flyash will include waste from TransAlta’s coal-fired generation activities near Edmonton, Alberta, which ended last year. Lafarge was awarded C$15 million ($11.17 million) from the Government of Alberta through Emissions Reduction Alberta to advance the project. Landfilled fly ash must first go through a beneficiation process to be used in concrete. The project will use the Ash-TEK Ponded Ash Beneficiation System (PABS) technology. A statement said that tests produced high quality ash during trials and proved to have a low carbon footprint and an economical operating cost. Lafarge said it plans to use this approach to remove moisture from the ash, mill it, and remove excess carbon. The Ash-TEK PABS technology is designed as a multi stage, modular ash beneficiation plant that converts ponded, carbon rich out of specification ash into a consistent ASTM class C or F Fly Ash. Each PABS line is designed to produce 100,000 tons of fly ash per year. Geocycle, a waste management services provider, and a Lafarge subsidiary in Canada, will also take part in the initiative. In 2021, TransAlta said it would shut down the Highvale mine, suspend the Sundance Unit 5 repowering project, and retire Sundance Unit 4 and Keephills Unit 1. Related Articles Alabama Power gets green light to cut payments to third-party energy producers Smokestacks demolished at New Mexico’s San Juan plant What’s next for Consumers Energy’s last coal units? AES Indiana to repower coal units to natural gas, add solar and storage