Okay. Well, listen, let's start this. Welcome everybody to the Northstar Clean Technologies Q3 Results and Investor Update. I'm joined here by Carson Sedun, our Director of Corporate Development, Rosemary Pritchard, our CFO, and the Kim Communications team, and thank them again for setting this all up for us. Listen, look, we've been doing this for a few quarters now. The plan is always to do a couple of things. Firstly, we'll cover the Q3 results, and I'll hand that over to Rosemary in a minute to do that. We'll do a bit of an update on the business, and then we'll do a Q&A. As always, click the Q&A and send your questions in Carson.
We'll be collating those, and we'll chat about that after we've done the presentation. Yeah, so that's the steps. As always, we've got the forward-looking statements for a bit of admin. I'll now hand it over to Rosemary for the financial summary.
Thank you, Aidan. Starting with the balance sheet. As you can see, we ended the quarter with just over CAD 1.2 million in cash. We also still have minimal debt with total assets of CAD 7.1 million. We only have debt of CAD 2.8 million, still looking pretty good. One item to bring to your attention that I discussed in the last quarter. We had a few hundred thousand dollars of GST receivable that I had mentioned was in audit. We have spoken to the auditors, it had been held up due to some new legislation that was coming into place all to do with cryptocurrency businesses, which is what Northstar was before it merged with Empower.
In speaking with them and some other professionals, it has been determined that it's very unlikely due to this new legislation, that we will be able to get reimbursed for these GST input tax credits. As a result, we did do a CAD 130,000 write-off in this quarter for those GST returns. On a positive note, after the Q3 was done, we did receive—they did release CAD 80,000 of GST for periods that followed the cryptocurrency periods. We also have another CAD 28,000 that should be coming in as well. We are collecting what we can. We had deposits on the balance sheet of about CAD 466,000.
This is all related to the Delta Pilot plant lease, and a small deposit for Metro Vancouver for the collection license and for BC Hydro. We did property, plant, and equipment purchases of CAD 654,000, which was actually CAD 754,000, we did receive a CAD 100,000 grant from Alberta Innovates, which offset part of those purchases. The equity-based compensation payable, that was all to do with the cash settled PSUs and RSUs that have been issued and are being amortized over the vesting period. Loans payable. The small amount of loans we do have on the book was the capitalization of an equipment loan. Lease liabilities, net investment in sublease, and right of use assets.
These are all to do with the capitalization of leases and subleases under the IFRS rules. Next slide, please. On the income statement, we are comparing here Q3 of 2022 with Q3 of 2021. Just to remind people that Q3 of 2021 is kind of this right after we went public. This is kind of when we just started to spend money on R&D and marketing activities, and towards the end of the quarter when we started hiring the executive team. In this quarter, our R&D was CAD 446,000 compared to CAD 160,000 last year, which makes sense. As I said, we were only just ramping up last year.
Our G&A expenses were approximately CAD 1.43 million, of which CAD 1.01 were cash-related items. Just to note on the G&A that this year we did have a very a cost focus for the year and reduced our G&A across different sectors in an effort to preserve cash flow. You will see that some costs are lower due to that. Our marketing costs, CAD 92,000 compared to CAD 531,000 last year. This is all to do with IR costs and publication costs required for being public and some other various marketing activities. Consulting fees, CAD 62,000 compared to CAD 139,000 in the prior year, mostly related to government relations and HR work.
These were higher in the prior year as there were still some costs associated with the capital raise and going public and with the extra hiring costs. Depreciation CAD 284,000 compared to CAD 115,000 in the prior year. Just a reminder that this year we started depreciating the Delta Pilot facility equipment, so we would expect this year to be higher. Professional fees CAD 70,000 compared to CAD 92,000 in the prior year. Last year had some additional remaining legal fees due to going public, so some cost savings there. Share-based compensation, CAD 133,000. This is the non-cash items relating to stock options, PSUs and RSUs. Then the wages, CAD 479,000 compared to CAD 96,000.
This increase again, last year at the end of Q3, they just started to hire the executive team. Q3 of this year we had a full team for the full quarter. We also have a full plant staff at the Delta Pilot facility as well. On the other items, just a few notes here. We did receive a small amount of CAD 2,800 from a PST rebate on equipment. This was a rebate program offered by the provincial government. We have a second PST rebate under review and are hoping to receive another CAD 26,000 for that. There's a loss on tax receivable. That CAD 130,000 relates to the GST write-off that I talked about earlier.
The income tax recovery, there's CAD 41,000 that we received due to a SR&ED refund. We actually have another CAD 78,000 coming. These two cash amounts that we got or are getting, all relate to SR&ED claims from before July 2021, before we were a public company. We did receive SR&ED credits after, they come in the form of tax credits rather than cash after July 2021. Next slide, please. On the statement of cash flows, the comparative period here is the nine months ending September. Total cash used in the nine-month period was CAD 4.7 million. This was made up of CAD 4 million of cash-related operating and R&D expenses.
As just discussed, major categories being R&D, marketing, consulting, professional fees, rent and utilities, and wages. The purchase of CAD 772,000 of property, plant, and equipment, again, offset by the CAD 100,000 grant from Alberta Innovates. Lease payments made were CAD 419,000. Loan repayments for the equipment loan we made, CAD 62,000. There was the equity subscriptions received. That was the CAD 500,000 of equity of shares purchased by Renewable U. On the next slide, please. On the equity, compared to last year, we increased from 106.1 million to 107.3 million shares. Again, this is due to the 1.25 million shares that were sold to Renewable U.
Our equity value did decrease over the six months, mainly due to the operating loss, but was offset by the increase in reserves for share-based compensation, and an increase in equity from the Renewable U raise. That is it from my side. Back to you, Aidan.
Thanks, Rosemary. Okay, let's go through the corporate and operations update. I mean obviously we had an investor call, you know, not so long ago to step through the detail of the McAsphalt offtake agreement and also the Renewable U funding. I mean, as you saw from the PR that we released last Friday, it's probably worth talking about Renewable U straight away. As you saw, we did not receive the payment that was due under that agreement at the end of October. We therefore did not execute the binding agreements on the 15th of November, which was the original targeted, you know, target date, but the work has continued.
We have a couple of turns of the documents have gone back and forth for Calgary. Those are the three key documents. That is the, that's the USA, the operating agreement and the setup of the partnership. Those documents have gone back and forth between the two sets of lawyers, and I would say are very close to being executable. Now we are just awaiting the funding. We continue to work with Renewable U on that. Kind of that's what we've said in the PR and that's where we're at today. The other thing obviously we talked about in that meeting was the offtake agreement for Calgary with McAsphalt.
We have now the binding agreements that are under that are with the lawyers for review from McAsphalt. That's ongoing, and that's well on track. The other things that we talked about are happening in Q3. I mean, the two things that are important from a Delta perspective, of course, are that we received the brokering license. That essentially enables us to bring trucks of shingles onto the site for processing. I think you saw last week we had the first truck from Westcan did arrive on site. That's obviously very important from a revenue stream perspective because that's, you know, is where we get paid the tipping fee for the truck receipt.
The receipt of the brokering license was the first part of that, and now engagement with the local suppliers to bring in shingles is the next thing that's ongoing. On the offtake side, we obviously had the purchase order from Delta. Again, I'll talk a little bit about customers in a minute, but that was the 80-ton purchase order with a major international flat roof manufacturer. That is due for pickup in the next couple of weeks here. That is a customer who had done testing, had tested the asphalt, thought it worked well with their manufacturing process.
This 80 tons is actually for them to manufacture the flat roof systems for advanced testing. That's exactly what we are seeing in terms of the benefit of customers having taken asphalt out of Delta for testing. You know, Q4 subsequent to Q3, we announced the Renewable U deal. We announced the McAsphalt offtake agreement. As you saw last week, we announced the patent issue from the U.S. Patent Office. So a little bit more context around that. We filed a patent in early March, for those of you who know our process, essentially, and you can see from our slide decks, we have kind of, you know, three steps in the process.
We have, you know, aggregate separation, fiber separation, and the back end is kind of like the asphalt processing unit. So we filed that along with a patent for the asphalt that comes out of the process. The U.S. Patent Office came back to us and said, "Well, look, this is very, very broad. Can you please file a patent individually?" You know, we started with the front end of the process. Then eight weeks ago, we got the patent, or about eight weeks ago, we got the patent approval back. The patent office had no follow-up with respect to the lawyers. We had no engineering, no engineering talking, you know, review with them. We had no questions that came back. They literally granted the patent straight away.
For me, that kind of says two things. I mean, this is the U.S. Patent Office, of course, right? They do a global search on anybody who's done anything with respect to this technology. It kind of shows that nobody is doing that, in my opinion. I think from the value, from the company perspective. Now, can people bypass patents and jump them and try to improve them and do lots of techniques to get around patents? They can, but you need to have a patent in place for that to happen. What we've done consequently is we've now filed the follow-on patents with the U.S. Patent Office. Those are relatively straightforward because they basically follow on from a patent that's granted.
That was the recommendation of the Patent Office or the patent lawyers. Front-end patent's granted, and then the next two are follow on. We've also filed a patent in Canada, just exactly the same patent but in Canadian jurisdiction. We'll be looking at the Global Patent Treaty to either in December or early in January to file there too. From a value and protection perspective, we think this is absolutely huge. To have it granted so quickly was pretty unbelievable. Obviously, in the PR, we were very matter-of-fact about the grant, but I think it's a huge, hugely successful outcome.
Then the last one, and I'll talk a little bit about that, kind of leads me into what we've achieved this year. As you saw the announcement this morning for the first U.S. plant and its and the letter of intent signed with a major industrial customer for our first U.S. facilities. Let's actually kind of jump into what we think about we've delivered this year. If you step back and you go up to 10,000 feet and you think about this company, as we came into this year, we had commissioned and tested some of the units in Delta, but we didn't have front to back production. We didn't have shingles going in the front end and asphalt coming out the back end.
We had, you know, we had no secure customers in the sectors that we want. As we think about the sectors that we want, that's the paving sector, the flat roof sector, and the shingle sector. Now as we leave 2020 we have an offtake agreement, or we have a purchase order coming out of Delta with a flat roof manufacturer. We have a paver in Calgary and a number of the discussions with the shingle manufacturers are ongoing, you know, for Toronto, for example. Now we have another major industrial customer in the U.S. with offtake. Now, you know, the Toronto agreements are being discussed. The U.S. agreement is a letter of intent, those are all emerging.
The most important thing about that is we've been producing asphalt out of the facility from Q1, and it's being tested again and again and again and again by these multi-billion dollar companies, and we're moving towards contract execution with them. I mean, Colas in Calgary is obviously the one that's furthest on. I would encourage everybody to go back and read that PR and read what Ron Vertz, the McAsphalt President, said about our asphalt. I mean, as you think about the pressure that all of these companies in these sectors are under from an ESG perspective, you know, this is exactly the kind of product that they want.
That's why when we think about these sectors and we think about these customer agreements, that's why I believe we're in such a huge part of strength coming out of the year with that in place. If you think about Delta, you know, Delta is now in steady state production, with volumes that are strong. That's because we've been operating the facility. You know, we're going to build the scale-up facility in Calgary and we have a year's worth of operation under our belt, at Delta de-risking, feedback from customers, feedback from manufacturers, sampling ongoing with constant feedback coming back to us at the plant about what's happening with the product and how we're producing and operations.
I mean, the plant is now moving towards de-bottlenecking and efficiency, and it's moving away from kind of getting operations started and commissioned and flow through. We're getting to a point now whereby the de-risking of Calgary has been really, really successful. The likely next step for Delta, as a number of you that have been on site tours know, we have the manufacturer's shingles of, like, kind of two to three tons of manufacturer's shingles sitting on site. The next thing now is we've commissioned and operated this plant on paper-based fiber, and now we're gonna switch it over to fiberglass.
As you think about fiberglass, the majority of the processing in the U.S. will be of fiberglass shingles. Canada stopped making paper shingles in the '80s, so what we'll see is the amount of processed volume of paper going down and the amount of processed volume of fiberglass going up. We think fiberglass will have higher efficiency. That's the next probably two to three months run that we will do at Delta.
That will also enable us, as we're kind of feeding into the detailed design for Calgary, to have a clear idea of how the process runs with the fiberglass, which is gonna be obviously a key feedstock for us as more roofs will be fiberglass as we move through time. I mean, the Delta facility, we now can say it has proven technology. With the patent, of course, that really secures the technology from a protection perspective. In Calgary, we have a site secured. Lease negotiations are almost complete on that.
We did a FEED study, you know, in Q1. The engineering out of that fed into our life cycle analysis. That's completed. You know, we've got a pretty good view that that has a 60% lower carbon footprint than the base case. We have a very strong. We've got a strong location, strong site, you know, good engineering and now ready to move to the next step. I mean, with respect to funding, you know, we had Alberta Innovates. We had the CAD 200,000 for engineering that came from Alberta Innovates. You know, hopefully more to talk about with respect to non-dilutive government funding over the next months. We had the CAD 750,000 from Renewable U.
Although the payment in October, you know, didn't come, we still have had Renewable U, you know, invest CAD 750,000 in the business at CAD 0.40 per share. That was another funding source. Obviously, you know, it's clear to us that, you know, the funding is gonna be key for building the Calgary facility, and we have a number of options that we're continuing to work on for that. Look, I think as we think about, you know, moving forward, I think it has been a really successful year, if you think about our customers, if you think about our patent, if you think about Calgary, and if you think about where we are in Delta.
You know, we have the delivery of the purchase order to the flat roof customer out of Delta in Q4. We're continuing the discussions with Renewable U. We're moving the McAsphalt, as I said, to definitive agreements. And we're hoping in the next month or so here to announce where we are on non-dilutive funding. Commercial production in Q1 in Delta, and detailed design for Calgary and as we go into next year. As you think about the business, I mean, ultimately this is a manufacturing business. It's a manufacturing process with ESG upside. I mean, that's what we've always said.
In the CAD 4 million worth of EBITDA we put out in Q1 when we discussed the estimated performance of the business, that didn't include any sustainability benefit. It didn't include any CO2, you know, kind of CO2 trading benefit. This is a manufacturing business that is in the right sector and has, you know, the ESG upside. The fundamentals of this business continue to improve. You know, the Calgary facility will divert 40,000 tons away from Calgary landfill. Every facility that we build is, you know, targeted for 40,000 tons. Diversion is critical for a number of these municipalities, especially the ones in Clean Cities.
We think tipping fees are under pressure to rise. We do not see shingles going into landfill getting any cheaper. We see that going up. On the back end, you know, we've got asphalt coming out the back end and obviously, you know, we've got supportive oil prices at this present time. If you think about the, if you think about the fundamentals that are going on to reposition refineries to be green refineries, you know, the thing that drops off the bottom of that is asphalt. We think supply-demand balance as asphalt is also under pressure there. A number of the customers that are talking to us, of course, about the ESG footprint we have, but they're also talking to us about base supply for the business.
Look, I continue to think we've had a very strong year in terms of performance as we outlined. With the fundamentals and what we expect to deliver in 2023, I think that will continue. Carson, I think over to you. I think, you know, as always, our, you know, Ken, Carson, and, you know, you've got the info at northstarcleantech.com as potential contacts for any follow-up. As always, it's great to have investors on these calls and asking questions, any additional follow-up, you know, any of the investors want to do, we're more than happy to chat.
Okay, thanks, Aidan. A couple questions coming in here, but feel free to add them into the chat if you have any questions. I guess question one, what's been the key lesson learned from Delta this year, and what are the top operational priorities for Delta next year?
I mean, it's almost like when you really learn about the operation of your facility when you're operating it. I mean, I know that sounds very ironic and a bit corny, but until you commission a facility and run it front to back, you know, day in, day out, it's really tough to get operational feedback on how have you designed it, how is it working, how are the pumps transferring, how is the back-end evaporator unit working. You know, I honestly think it's just cumulative and improvement by improvement by improvement, I think that's been the critical thing.
I think, you know, the learnings are probably, I don't know, a spreadsheet of 100 lines long, because nobody's ever built one of these before. It's not like we have a refinery running in the U.K., and we're building a refinery in Canada, and we're copying it, and we still learn as we switch this on. You know, look, does Calgary have scale-up risk? Of course it does. Will it be kind of the same thing? Well, of course it will. We've got a, you know, a three to six month or, you know, three-month commissioning period, built in for Calgary. Will we use it? Yeah, we will.
I think we have proven that the technology works. We have proven that we can put asphalt shingles into the front end of this facility, and we get aggregate and fiber and asphalt out the back end. 80 tons of that asphalt is going into advanced testing, being picked up in a week or so's time. We've been sending the asphalt out to all the customers for as you know, for testing. People like McAsphalt are coming back and saying, "We have so much faith in your technology. We'll do a five-year offtake agreement for 10,000 tons a year out of Calgary, and we'll help you with the engineering, and we'll continue to provide you feedback from R&D.
The proof of that contract to me is absolutely huge. I think for next year, for Delta, I think there's two key things to do. The first key thing to do is to run the manufacturer's shingles, which are 100% fiberglass, no paper, such that we can send aggregate samples, fiberglass samples, and asphalt samples to all our customers. All the customers want pure fiberglass, pure aggregate from fiberglass tiles, and the asphalt off the back. Basically because, as I said earlier, North America in 10 years' time will probably be 99% fiberglass.
The manufacturers, the shingle manufacturers that we're talking to also want us to run those so that they understand when they send us their offcuts, which could be, you know, in a 40,000-ton facility in Calgary, you know, those offcuts could be 5,000 tons a year. It could be, you know, that amount, kind of 10%- 20% of our feedstock, depending on where we're located and depending where the shingle manufacturers are. It could be an important feedstock. The customers really want to understand what is the circularity of the fiberglass look like? What does the circularity of the asphalt look like? No, not the asphalt, sorry. What does the circularity of the aggregate look like?
Everybody knows that they can use the asphalt that comes off it, but especially for aggregate and for fiber, that testing. Then we need to get the plant up to the 50– 75 tons. I expect that to be a Q1 shutdown, and as we come out of Q1, I expect to be at. That's what I expect the capacity to be at. I think fiberglass first and then the shutdown for the capacity development second. Sorry, Carson, a bit of a long answer, but quite a lot to do next year, too.
Yeah, no worries. Can you touch on the LOI signed this morning and what that means for our U.S. expansion plans? Does that take away from Toronto development?
The way that I see the development is, of course, would be the work we talk about at Delta, then Calgary to be built and essentially to be built by this time next year. Then I think we would follow that closely with Toronto. Look, to be perfectly honest with you, the discussions in Toronto are going so well, with a number of different customers who are obviously kinda anchored in the Ontario region, that could either be one or potentially even two facilities. I think the Pacific Northwest, you know, could either follow in parallel or slightly after.
We could be in a position whereby, you know, 2023 is the year to deliver Calgary and 2024 is the year to deliver Toronto 1, you know, and/or Toronto 2 or Pacific Northwest. I think the earliest we will see Pacific Northwest is by the end of 2024. Look, it's really important. The U.S. market is really important. I mean, as you know, that's where the rollout and the scale-up of the business is focused as well. We have some decisions to make on timing. The LOI is with a major offtake customer, and it's for all the products. It's for asphalt, it's for fiberglass, and it's for sand.
I mean, of course, as the PR says, we need to make sure that we're meeting the specification and what we'll see coming out of Calgary, we'll be able to support that, same in Delta as we, as we do work. And this customer has been helping us all the way through with feedback on here's what we need from the aggregate, feedback on here's what we need for the fiberglass and feedback on here's what we need from the asphalt. It's been a clear discussion around specification. This is for one or more facilities. With this customer, we could not only do our first U.S. plant, but potentially follow-ons as well.
My expectancy is that we would probably secure the binding offtake agreement by the middle of next year. I can't say if that's kind of like June or September, whatever, but certainly that will lay down exactly where the U.S. location, exactly which plant on the customer side it'll deliver to, and the specifications and the pricing for everything. A bit like the binding term sheet that we did for McAsphalt, a similar sort of agreement or maybe even like full definitive agreements, you know, by the middle of next year. That will lay out the detailed timeline for the U.S. facilities.
Okay, thank you. A question on the patents. What's the plan for the follow-on continuation patents? When do you expect an update to the market?
They've already been filed. As soon as we were granted the U.S. patent, when you get granted a patent, you have to then pay the patent office, and then it takes them a little while to process it and whatever. As we were doing that process in parallel, we filed the follow-ons. Likely they will probably take a little longer, but we're hoping, you know, kind of by the middle to end of next year, I would think. I suspect they will not be anywhere near as fast as the patents that we got.
Okay, thank you. Question on Calgary. What's the status of the lease on Calgary? Is the chosen Calgary plant just land or an existing structure, and what needs to happen to develop the site?
The site has been selected. The final leases, the final lease, if not, I mean, is due to be executed pretty soon. I'm thinking like in the next few weeks. The lawyers have been going back and forth on the lease agreement. It's a just, I think, nearly four acre site near the landfill, and it's open land. There's no building on it. We are likely to put the, the building or sorry, the facilities inside a like a kind of a sprung tented structure, you know, building. Is that it? Anything else on the—did I miss anything on that question?
Nope. Nope. That's good. What are the next steps on advancing the McAsphalt deal?
I mean, essentially just the definitive agreement. We have the first definitive agreement was prepared by McAsphalt. Our lawyers are going through it now, and that's essentially it. It's essentially taking the binding term sheet and converting it into a definitive agreement. I mean, you know, weeks away in terms of getting that secured. I mean, if you saw the binding term sheet, now we had to obviously redact pricing or whatever. Pricing has been agreed, terms have been agreed, nomination procedures.
Nomination procedures have been agreed at a high level, but the definitive agreement will say, "Okay, we need to ring them on the 20th of every month and give them the outline for production for the next month, and they need to tell us what's happening with trucking." It's really just the formalization, the agreement formalization of what's in the term sheet. We have absolutely no expectancy for terms to change, and we've chatted about that and Colas McAsphalt are in exactly the same place. The terms, especially the commercial terms are all fully agreed.
Okay, thank you. Another question on the U.S. thoughts on expansion outside of the Pacific Northwest?
Look, again, the way that we think about strategy of the U.S. is kind of twofold. Number one, as we engage with this customer set, where are they located with their plants? Number one. Number two, what is the attractiveness of a market? Let's step back and think about kind of like what phase one looks like. We always said phase one looked like Calgary, Toronto and Pacific Northwest. We have, you know, maybe we have Toronto too, but certainly that's what we said phase one looked like. Phase two was always about rolling out through the U.S. As we look at market attractiveness, we use a grid that has tipping fee versus asphalt price.
As you know from our commercial model, roughly 30%-35% of our value comes from the tipping fee revenue and about 60% from the asphalt and then fiberglass and aggregate, you know, together about 5%, roughly. That's what we kind of when we've been kinda doing our presentations and talking about where the value lies. The two critical determining assumes of value are what's the asphalt price versus what's the tipping fee. We have, you know, our top 10 U.S. facilities for phase 2 already outlined. We have that overlaid with customers.
For example, this LOI this morning was all about, as we look through the locations of that customer and we look through the markets that are attractive, where do the Venn diagrams intersect? They do. They do for all of our customers, whether that's, you know, a Colas customer, whether that's our flat roof customer, whether it's, you know, a shingle customer, whether it's a major industrial customer. I mean, any of that, we have markets that are really attractive. I think we can easily point to the first 10 that we would do in phase 2. That's the first thing.
The second thing is, look, you know, there are going to be markets that are unattractive, where the asphalt price is low and the tipping fee is low. For, for those markets, what we would likely do is we may license the technology. What licensing the technology looks like is, we think that we probably need to have built three to five facilities before we do that. We can easily, we've got full process improvement from plant one to plant five. By the time you get to five plants, you're in a position whereby like, "Okay, so here's the modular system that you're going to get." You know, a licensee would be using BBA engineering.
A licensee would be feeding all of the plant information back to BBA so that they're included in the performance improvements. A licensee would be getting all the performance improvements we're doing in plant 15 and plant 20 and plant 25, et cetera, et cetera. We think the attractive markets where we have overlap with our customers are pretty no-brainers. Then markets which are less attractive, either if a customer is there or not, then we think we will be able to access that market with licensing. In 2020. Think about the two fundamentals that I didn't mention earlier, but that are huge.
In 2020. This year in 2022, ARMA, the Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association, came out and said that they want to divert away from landfill 50% of shingles by 2035 and 100% of shingles by 2050. They want no shingles going into landfill by 2050. In 2021, the estimated figure is that one million tons of shingles were ground up and put into roads in the US, and 14.85 million, so nearly 15 million tons, went into landfill. Think, each one of our plants does 40,000 tons. That is a spectacular number of plants. We will not be the only technology.
We will not be the only solution for solving that 15 million tons, that's the target. 50% of those by 2035 and 100% of it by 2050, today it's 15 million tons, which is a spectacular amount of shingles going into landfill.
Okay. What do you feel is the biggest risk to the business today?
I honestly think that, you know, we've always said, that, scale up. I think two things. We've always said that we believe that we've de-risked the technology, such that Calgary is a manageable, well-managed process and manageable step. It's a risk. There is no doubt whenever you scale up, it's a risk. I think when we build Calgary and we optimize it, and every single facility after that will be 40,000 tons and it's the same. I think the technology risk is done. I think when you take these steps in ESG businesses, you need to take the first step, and that's the can you prove your technology? And that's the biggest step. That's the toughest step.
Then you take the next step, which is the de-risking step to scale it up. I think then you're on a bit of a flat path. Then at that point in time, it's literally speed of deployment. I think the risk, the biggest risk to manage in 2023 is the scale up and building Calgary. I think from 2024 on, it's, it's having the organization in place that can roll out, you know, three to four facilities a year and do patenting at the same time. That's a bit of a build an organization that can do that risk, I think. Honestly, I think we've taken the biggest step. I mean, we've always said three key things for an ESG business.
Number one, do you have a technology that works? Number two, do you have a plan to scale it up? Number three, can you roll it out? Like this year we have proven Number one. We have a technology that works. 2023, we prove that we can scale it up and we have a clear plan on how to do that. Then 2024, we just roll it out. Managing the risk of that rollout, that will be the biggest risk, moving the business forward. I think those are probably the two biggest risks I see.
Okay. Thank you. That's all the time we have for today. We'll wrap it up there.
Excellent. Well, listen, thanks all for that. As always, thanks Kim for helping us out. Look, thanks investors for attending and I think we've had a great year in 2022, and I look forward to our Q1 call in 2023.