A New Look and New Resources for Canada's Leading Online Resource for Information on Carbon Capture and Storage - http://www.ccs101.ca Re-launch and International Teachers Curriculum Guide
A New Look and New Resources for Canada's Leading Online Resource for Information on Carbon Capture and Storage - http://www.ccs101.ca Re-launch and International Teachers Curriculum Guide
REGINA, Saskatchewan, August 16, 2012/PRNewswire/ --
There is a new-look website and new materials online for people wanting to know more
about Carbon Capture and Storage technology (CCS).
The CCS101.ca website is a one-stop-shop for information on CCS. At CCS101.ca visitors
can access the latest knowledge on CCS in Canada and from around the world. As Canada
leads global CCS research, development and large-scale demonstration, this website aims to
make information on this important suite of technologies available to everyone, both
domestically and internationally.
CCS101.ca was funded through the IEAGHG Weyburn - Midale CO2 Monitoring and Storage
Project. This project is the world's largest and most extensively researched CO2
monitoring and storage project, involving researchers from around the globe. "It is
incredibly important for us as researchers to look beyond the project and put forward
information about this technology in a way that is accessible to people globally," said
Dr. Malcolm Wilson CEO of the Petroleum Technology Research Centre, and a former member of
the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that won the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize.
The newly refurbished CCS101.ca website is hosted locally in Saskatchewan and has
added some impressive features for educators, including full access to a highly
anticipated international curriculum guide on CCS. Developed by the Global CCS Institute
in Canberra, Australia, and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organisation (CSIRO), these materials set the international benchmark for bringing
discussions on low-emissions energy technologies into the classroom.
"The CCS education resources have been reviewed by science and education experts and
trialled in classrooms across Australia and internationally. We are delighted that Canada
will be the first country outside Australia to provide them thanks to the established
CCS101.ca website. We are confident they will help school students understand the
important role CCS can play as one of the technologies needed to move to a low carbon
economy," said Brad Page, Chief Executive Officer, Global CCS Institute, which launched
the curriculum resources earlier this week during National Science Week in Australia.
For more information contact:
Richard Fink, ABC
Public Communication and Outreach Theme Lead
IEAGHG Weyburn-Midale CO2 Monitoring and Storage Project
rfink@empresacomm.ca
+1-306-535-8144