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Calgary’s CURA Climate Using Patented Electrochemistry for Low-Carbon Cement

March 10, 2026 by Knowlton Thomas Leave a Comment

CURA, a Calgary-based climate technology startup-to-watch, is partnering with a B.C.-based precast concrete manufacturer.

Alberta’s CURA Climate has signed an agreement with Grand Forks Concrete to deploy a pilot‑scale demonstration plant and also establish a first‑of‑kind commercial facility to convert agricultural spent lime into low‑carbon cement and agricultural co‑products.

“Agricultural spent lime has long been treated as a liability,” explains Erin Bobicki, chief executive officer of CURA.

Bobicki says that, “together with Grand Forks Concrete, we’re building the first pilot and commercial facilities capable of producing low‑carbon ordinary Portland cement through electrochemistry—something that simply doesn’t exist anywhere today.”

Launched by Bobicki alongside Phil De Luna, Sabrina Scott, and Curtis Berlinguette, CURA emerged from stealth last year with a patent-pending electrochemical process that upgrades spent lime waste into low-carbon cement and agricultural products by selectively extracting high-value components and removing impurities.

The technology uses electricity and water, rather than heat and fuel, to process materials.

Bobicki believes the innovation could prove “transformational for the circular economy and for the future of low‑carbon cement production.”

“This is about more than cleaner cement,” Bobicki says. “It’s about redesigning industrial systems so yesterday’s waste becomes today’s feedstock—supporting farmers, builders, and communities at the same time.”

“This collaboration aligns perfectly with our commitment to innovation and sustainability,” stated David Torrie, President of Grand Forks Concrete.

Under the Memorandum of Understanding, CURA and GFC will execute a three‑phase program, starting either a feasibility assessment, then a pilot demonstration, and finally commercial deployment.

The program will demonstrate how spent lime from agricultural processing can be upgraded into low‑carbon cement and nutrient‑rich agricultural inputs, as well as validate the technical, operational, and economic data required for commercial deployment.

“By working with CURA to build both a pilot plant and a commercial facility, we’re strengthening our supply chain and advancing a true circular economy—turning spent lime into high‑value cement and agricultural feedstocks that support a more resilient industrial system,” Torrie said.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: CURA

About Knowlton Thomas

Knowlton Thomas is Editor-in-Chief of The Midway Advance and Senior Writer for Calgary.tech. Over more than a decade of journalism, he has penned thousands of articles and dozens of essays on technology, health, and culture across a variety of publications.

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