Climate Startup Removes CO2 From the Air In Industry First 131
Swiss company Climeworks announced Thursday that it has successfully taken carbon dioxide out of the air and put it in the ground where it will eventually turn into rock in a process that has been verified by an independent third-party auditor. It the first time a company has successfully taken carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, put it underground to be locked away permanently and delivered that permanent carbon removal to a paying customer. CNBC reports: The development has been a long time coming. Christoph Gebald and Jan Wurzbacher co-founded Climeworks in 2009 as a spinoff of ETH Zurich, the main technical university in Switzerland's largest city. They have been scaling the technology for direct carbon removal, wherein machines vacuum greenhouse gasses out of the air. have all bought future carbon removal services from Climeworks in a bid to help kick-start the nascent industry. Now Climeworks is actually removing the carbon dioxide and putting it underground in a process that has been certified by DNV, an independent auditor.
The cost of carbon dioxide removal and storage for these corporate clients is confidential and depends on what quantity of carbon dioxide the companies want to have removed and over what period of time. But the general price for carbon removal runs to several hundred dollars per ton. Individuals can also pay to Climeworks to remove carbon dioxide to offset their personal emissions.
Climeworks' largest carbon dioxide removal facility is located in Iceland, where it partners with CarbFix, which stores the gas underground. CarbFix dissolves carbon dioxide in water then intermingles that mixture with basalt rock formations. Natural processes convert the material to solid carbonate minerals in about two years. In June, Climeworks announced it had begun construction of its second commercial-sized plant in Iceland that will capture and store 36,000 metric tons per year of carbon dioxide.
The cost of carbon dioxide removal and storage for these corporate clients is confidential and depends on what quantity of carbon dioxide the companies want to have removed and over what period of time. But the general price for carbon removal runs to several hundred dollars per ton. Individuals can also pay to Climeworks to remove carbon dioxide to offset their personal emissions.
Climeworks' largest carbon dioxide removal facility is located in Iceland, where it partners with CarbFix, which stores the gas underground. CarbFix dissolves carbon dioxide in water then intermingles that mixture with basalt rock formations. Natural processes convert the material to solid carbonate minerals in about two years. In June, Climeworks announced it had begun construction of its second commercial-sized plant in Iceland that will capture and store 36,000 metric tons per year of carbon dioxide.
seems like a silly exercise (Score:2)
Would someone please tell me why they don't just break down the CO2 into C and O2, release the O2 back into the air, and then sell the carbon to whoever needs it? It's a solid, technically you could just stuff it away somewhere like a closed salt mine, it's not hazardous waste so it shouldn't be too hard to find a place that will accept it?
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Would someone please tell me why they don't just break down the CO2 into C and O2, release the O2 back into the air, and then sell the carbon to whoever needs it? It's a solid, technically you could just stuff it away somewhere like a closed salt mine, it's not hazardous waste so it shouldn't be too hard to find a place that will accept it?
The problem with carbon capture is volume. The earth is a very big place, lots of air. Removing thousands of tons of carbon sounds impressive, but it is like removing a few drops of water from the ocean. Putting less carbon into the air in the first place is the only thing that will actually work.
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Power it with renewables and just let it churn.
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The cycle starts with separating H2 from O, and binding it usually to C. That gives you HydroCarbons. Half the energy is in the gas, the other half is actually in the O2 in the air. Combining the two is what releases the energy. (most people seem to overlook or not understand the O2 side of the energy equation)
So yes, if you crack the CO2 it's not a lot different than cracking H2O to get H and O. (or as an intermediate step in desalinization) Yes it takes energy, but the fossil fuel we've already burne
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Re: seems like a silly exercise (Score:2)
We already have that technology: plants and trees do it all day long. They are a major atmospheric carbon sink and oxygen source.
Industrially, it's very hard to split CO2. CO2 is the end product of energy production, so going backwards costs energy. It can be done, but it's a tall order to do it on a large enough scale to make a dent in the entire planet's CO2.
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sell the carbon to whoever needs it
Coal! Woo hoo!
Re: seems like a silly exercise (Score:2)
Would someone please tell me why they don't just break down the CO2 into C and O2, release the O2 back into the air, and then sell the carbon to whoever needs it?
These are covalent bonded and it requires a lot of energy to strip 1 O(leaving CO), and great deal more to strip 2 Os.
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All of these stories about carbon capture are just the oil industry trying to trick us into thinking we don't need to make any changes to o
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Breaking CO2 apart isn't easy. Because you're not breaking it, you're tearing it. You're forcing it apart. And if that's not strong enough a wording, it essentially means you have to pump in a LOT of energy to do that. CO2 is a pretty stable molecule that doesn't want to be broken apart.
The problem is not storing or selling that carbon. Hey, it's a great fuel with a lot of KJ you could get by burning it to CO2. Guess where that energy would have to come from when you try to turn CO2 into carbon.
Carbonite (Score:3)
I wonder how Han Solo feels about this.
Joules per ton (Score:2)
What is the energetic cost per ton to do this? If there was a way to do this with solar power we could call it a Terrestrial Reclaim of Expended Energy or a T.R.E.E for short. Were these devices to become ubiquitous we could call them tree/s.
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Re: Joules per ton (Score:2)
But, you are spot-on about dealing with the tree. If we use it in.a house, furniture, etc is fine, but what we need to avoid is burning it. Sadly, Europe pushed the idea that burning wood, veggies, etc is fine, even though it requires more energy than.what it gives.
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What is the energetic cost per ton to do this? If there was a way to do this with solar power we could call it a Terrestrial Reclaim of Expended Energy or a T.R.E.E for short. Were these devices to become ubiquitous we could call them tree/s.
This whole game if funded by dopey carbon credit schemes where you get more credits for permanent removal of carbon from atmosphere. For schemes where there is leakage over time you get less points so T.R.E.E. = bad.
This is why technologies such as biomass + CCS are hot because they count as net negative carbon removal. This same technology at a coal plant will win you some points but not as many because the best you can get to there is 0 not negative.
This is where all that ESG/carbon tax money goes to di
Charge them. (Score:2)
the general price for carbon removal runs to several hundred dollars per ton.
Every product should be priced with the added amount it costs to remove the CO2 expelled to make/ship it from the atmosphere. You would need to ramp up the percentage paid so that industrial sectors would adapt but it really wouldn't take much to enable "the free market" to favor non-polluting companies.
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That's also part of why it's an incredibly stupid idea. In order for any local economy to not sink itself into oblivion, basically the whole world needs to do the same thing. And even if you can get the whole world to agree to it, getting each country to enforce it and not just pretend to enforce it is another matter entirely. People who don't have their head in the clouds and realize this will naturally vote against it.
Besides that, if you think the COVID supply chain issues were bad, you haven't seen anyt
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You also need to tax imports and give credits for exports.
Re: Charge them. (Score:2)
This would do more to stop emissions than anything else. In addition, it would stop it quickly.
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Some of us have been in favour of this for DECADES.
Look at the carbon impact of animal products.
This is a huge portion of the reality as to why this will not be adopted any time soon.
But I think it's a stellar idea and would actually have a huge impact.
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Why do I get the feeling that you're one of those dweebs that go to steakhouses and demand that they serve vegan meals to accommodate you?
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How is this not a trolling comment?
But I can play too: why do I get the feeling you're one of those dweebs who think they're 'bombarded' with 'vegan propaganda' when you're one of the people constantly harassing vegans and making an issue of it?
But for the record, no. I prefer giving my money to businesses who align with my values.
And in the context of the OPs post, there's a LOT of carbon sunk into animal products, much much more than plant foods, and if they were taxed accordingly, very few would be order
Re: Charge them. (Score:2)
But for the record, no. I prefer giving my money to businesses who align with my values.
Who said anything about giving money to them? I'm talking about this:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=... [youtube.com]
Typically, when somebody goes around advertising they they're vegan by e.g. wearing it on their shirts, or in this case, your username, and won't ever shut up about it, this is what I think of. Just as annoying as missionaries. For context, they had already been doing that for months before this video was shot. Though in the end, all they did was give him more business. A LOT more.
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Every product should be priced with the added amount it costs to remove the CO2 expelled to make/ship it from the atmosphere. You would need to ramp up the percentage paid so that industrial sectors would adapt but it really wouldn't take much to enable "the free market" to favor non-polluting companies.
Give a person a metric and they will find a way to abuse it as we've seen with many carbon/ESG schemes turning out to be pointless scams. The proceeds of carbon tax have little chance of being spent properly and productively.
Why not remove from water? (Score:2)
This makes great sense. (Score:2)
Yeah. No. (Score:3)
1) it does not remove anywhere close to what the nations and auditor's claimed
2) that the majority of claimed buy/reforest was false. Some was already forested, and the rest of the buys did not happen.
All in all, the only solution is cut emissions on our GHG and to tax goods based on where the worst part comes from.
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The solution is to stop thinking there's one solution. There's not. We should be planting trees. We should be reducing our primary energy consumption. We should be investing R&D into direct air capture of carbon. We should be developing CCS. We should be looking to alternative means of production and consumption.
The only thing we should not do is discount any of the above due to some fuckwits using it to run a scam (like the tree planting thing you mention)
their yearly sequestration amount is miniscule (Score:2)
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The more you insist on delaying it, the harder it will be.
I did the same thing (Score:2)
I planted a tree in my back yard -- keeps storing more carbon every year.
A very small step for mankind (Score:2)
The proposed plant is intended to remote 36,000 tonnes of CO2 each year.
This is, possibly deliberately, one millionth of the world annual total of about 36 billion tonnes.
It's going to take an awful lot of these plants!
Is that sensible? (Score:3)
How much energy does it cost to capture a ton of CO2? And how much CO2 does a power plant produce to produce that amount of power?
Hint: More.
Recycle me not? (Score:2)
The question nobody is asking (Score:3)
Re: The question nobody is asking (Score:2)
Re: The question nobody is asking (Score:2)
Rockyfield carbon? (Score:3)
Isn't that called 'coal'?
how long can we permanently remove CO2? (Score:2)
How long can we 'permanently' remove CO2 from the air? It's a closed system right? So what are the long term effects of sequestration?
Yeah, didn't think anyone had even looked at that.
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Nature have sequestrated carbon for hundreds of millions of years in the form of oil and coal, pretty long term I would say. That's what we are releasing right now, and it seems that we won't have to wait millions of years to see the effects of that, and they don't look good, so the idea is to put it back underground.
Trees? (Score:2)
I suppose this is obvious, but vegetation already does this, without human intervention. I am surrounded by forest, which is pretty good at the task. I'll just stick with the old methods.
Volcanic reheatng of Carbonate Minerals (Score:2)
Re:Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:5, Informative)
Renewables often produce excess energy for which no immediate use or storage is available. So go ahead and use that to put some carbon in the ground and then, when you need energy and renewables are not handy, just burn some fossil fuels without contributing to global warming. Or install generators in desolate sunny and windy places where nobody needs the energy, and capture carbon right there. Use the whole atmosphere as a giant boundless capacity battery, pretty neat.
Invented a more efficient battery? That's fine, price carbon and let market pick the most efficient mechanism for each situation. No need to dump on startups, most startups are not practical for many years and until they scale up and optimize anyway.
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Can I get a carbon credit by sealing three of the largest "sparkling water" springs in the US: Soda Springs, Idaho; Mineral Springs Park, Mississippi; and Manitou Springs, Colorado? They already have the CO2 dissolved in the water and keeping them underground would be a natural way to accomplish the same thing as the Climeworks process.
Or perhaps we can just have Climeworks pump tanker trucks of Perrier sparkling water in the basalt so they can skip the capture process. /s
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That wouldn't be sufficient. You'd need to keep them sealed in underground. I believe (without checking) that the Swiss process only works where there are certain rock types underground that can absorb CO2. I forger offhand what those are, but there are several of them. Some can be found on the surface, and if you smash the large rocks into sand, the sand can absorb CO2 (and turn into a different kind of rock).
That doesn't mean that I think the process is practical. Perhaps on the surface. It's one of
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Can I get a carbon credit by sealing three of the largest "sparkling water" springs in the US
Can you actually seal them? Doesn't need to be permanent, but it does need to last at least a few hundred years. I think that would be extremely difficult. I expect that the CO2 would find alternate escape routes. And can you ensure you're not going to cause any other environmental problems in the process?
But assuming you can actually do it, the answer should be "yes". CO2 is fungible. Halting natural emission of X tons is just as good as avoiding manmade emissions of X tons, or as recovering and sequest
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Indeed. These carbon capture systems are very capital intensive, so it makes no sense to operate them only when "surplus" power is available.
This is a stupid scam and a diversion from what we should be doing: Stopping carbon emissions at their source by installing wind and solar.
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And what about all of the excess CO2 already in the air? Just leave it there?
Stopping the addition of CO2 is definitely important, because it is making the situation worse, but it does not solve the problem. The problem is that as a species, we've put a ton of excess CO2 (and other gasses, let's not forget that) into the atmosphere, having dug them up from the ground. Capturing that CO2 and putting it back in the ground is a really good idea.
Likely the most cost-effective approach will be massive re-fore
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And what about all of the excess CO2 already in the air? Just leave it there?
Yes, for now, until there are no more fossil plants/cars left. It's much better ROI so there's no reason to do silly carbon capture.
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Indeed. These carbon capture systems are very capital intensive, so it makes no sense to operate them only when "surplus" power is available.
Absolutely everything is capital intensive until its productized, fossil fuels were also practical in very restricted circumstances initially, like drainage for coal mines where coal was mostly used for home heating. Current battery tech is not viable to provide transportation for 8 billion people. First computers occupied multiple floors of the building. Should we just stop trying?
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It probably should have been a roller coaster at least.
Re:Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:4, Interesting)
The energy used for the chemical reaction is geothermal so it comes "for free" (except for pumping CO2 down there, but they can produce geothermal electricity as well to cover that). So it might work as advertised, but we don't need to call it like that to decide it's a bad idea. Assuming it works as carbon negative, it's still a really inefficient way to use the available geothermal energy. One can use the same investment to build one more geothermal plant and produce a more sizeable reduction in carbon emissions from burning oil and coal (20% of their Iceland's electrical production is from oil and 5% from coal according to https://www.nordicenergy.org/f... [nordicenergy.org] ). Their technology only works at a handful of islands with suitable volcanic activity, so not up-scalable to entire countries. It's at most a cool demonstration concept.
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My point is none of these schemes can be carbon negative because by the time you're done building out the infrastructure to make them work you'll have spent so much energy just on the build out that you're in the hole.
The point of these schemes and scams is to shut down talk of moving away from fossil fuels by holding out the promise that we can keep burning as much as we wa
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Geothermal can be difficult to leverage for usable electric power, especially if the temperature gradients are too low.
Re:Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:4, Informative)
If we have unlimited free energy from geothermal why in the name of Christ aren't we using that instead of burning fossil fuels?
Because the geothermal energy is in Iceland, and we're not.
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Really long undersea DC transmission lines exist. Without checking my guess would be limited capacity, otherwise it would make sense to export it.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
4,500km long.
You're missing the point (Score:2)
If we have renewable energy we should use that and stop burning fossil fuel. It's incredibly dumb to use are limited supply of renewable energy so we can keep burning oil & gas. The only reason to do that is so that people who own lots of oil and gas (e.g. Saudi Arabia, Russia, I
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Did anyone say it was a solution?
Who said that? Where?
There is no single, magic bullet solution to climate change. It will require a lot of solutions all happening at once. Carbon capture technology is going to be one.
Climate change is not caused by any one single thing and the solution is also not going to be any one single thing. These are complex systems, complex problems, and the solutions will be complex, and multi-facted.
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The point of these schemes and scams is to shut down talk of moving away from fossil fuels by holding out the promise that we can keep burning as much as we want without any repercussions..
You live in a fantasy world where we will one day be fossil fuel free. I suspect your idea of how emissions in the world work stems from knowing that coal plants and cars exist without concerning yourself with the many things we do that involve burning fossil fuels for which there are no alternatives within our current engineering capabilities.
Your lack of insight doesn't make it a scam.
Though I agree with your that this discourages innovation and in one way I believe that in industry that is capable of bec
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I love how all of the EV fans seem to overlook the fact that the cars are built out of hundreds of pounds of plastic, and are currently delivered using Diesel trucks.
We're going to be depending on oil for a LONG time.
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Sure, but that amount is completely negligible compared to what's required to actually power a vehicle.
A car has like 150-200kg of plastics in it and lasts 20 years easily. I couldn't find out how much oil & gas products it takes to make them. But one tank is 60-80 liters and people can go through several of those in a month, so you can ballpark what takes more resources.
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"If we have unlimited free energy from geothermal why in the name of Christ aren't we using that instead of burning fossil fuels?"
Because geothermal energy comes with toxic brines that bubble off hydrogen sulfide and also scale up the heat exchangers.
And most of the world sits on stable rock where the usable heat is ten miles down.
Then if the rock is not naturally fractured you have to do that as well. Eventually the rock in the immediate area cools down and you have to fracture more to maintain production.
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Perhaps with foreign investment from the carbon sequestration market, Iceland can build more geothermal plants to reduce their fossil fuel reliance.
Re:Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:4, Informative)
Iceland can build more geothermal plants to reduce their fossil fuel reliance.
What dependence? Iceland burns no fossil fuel for electricity.
Iceland's power comes from hydro and geothermal.
Iceland has some of the cheapest electricity in the world.
Icelink [wikipedia.org] is a proposed undersea HVDC connection to Scotland.
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I am referencing the grandparent post that claims:
"20% of their Iceland's electrical production is from oil and 5% from coal".
You don't expect me to fact check other posters, surely. :)
Re:Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:5, Insightful)
We should be building thousands of these, and power them with solar or wind, and just let them run.
the need to switch over to renewable energy and away from fossil fuels.
We should definitely do that. But the carbon that's already in the carbon cycle is not going to go away, and we really need it to be reduced. We shouldn't aim to limit to 1.5 or even 2 degrees C of warming over the next century. We should actually be aiming to COOL the system back down.
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We need to do both.
Yes, someday we will need to remove CO2 from the atmosphere. But that is going to be difficult and expensive, so it is idiotic to waste resources on that while we are still spewing out 45 gigatonnes of new CO2 every year.
Humanity still has BRAND NEW coal-burning power plants under construction. Stopping that should be our priority.
Each dollar spent on wind and solar will do a hundred times as much good as silly CO2 capture and sequestration schemes.
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We are at a stage of human progress that we could, and therefore should, head off centuries long problems decades in advance.
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When you say 'humanity still has BRAND NEW coal-burning power plants under construction' which we should make a priority of stopping...
Who is actually building these plants, and what should we do to stop them? Is it any particular country or two that is doing this?
Have we tried asking them nicely to stop?
Re:Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:4, Interesting)
"There's already too much CO2 in the atmosphere. "
If humanity is taking responsibility for planetary climate, what is the correct CO2 level? The Pliocene Climatic Optimum also had 400 ppm CO2 and was much nicer. They just found evidence of an ecosystem in northern Greenland from that time.
Are we to adjust the climate for a global ecological optimum or for the convenience of the coastal elite who doesn't want their beachfront property to slip beneath the waves?
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Are we to adjust the climate for a global ecological optimum or for the convenience of the coastal elite who doesn't want their beachfront property to slip beneath the waves?
Or how about island nations, and poor people who also live on some coast lines?
I like modern "nerd" logic. If we can't settle on some figure, then we may as well let it rip.
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But you neglected to answer the question. What is the "correct" temperature? The island nations will be much larger if we pull the CO2 back down to 180 ppm, but everything north of 40 degrees latitude will be under the ice sheet again. But England will get the Dogger Bank back, offsetting the loss of Scotland.
If you want to hold the climate in stasis at say 1950, then we have to adjust CO2 level to offset the Milankovitch cycle, as that is steadily leading to the next ice age.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ [wikipedia.org]
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The 'coastal elite' consists of 2 billion people. I.e. 1/3 of the world's population lives on the coasts.
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We need to look at clever ways to boost renewable capacity, and this might be one possible option. If we can build massive amounts of renewable energy, say by filling the North Sea with wind turbines, we will be able to cover in excess of 99% of our demand, and most of the time have vast amounts of excess energy. Key to making it worth installing so many turbines is finding a way to make that excess energy profitable.
If this, or say hydrogen production, or desalination, could work to make that excess profit
Re:Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course you do not power that with fossiles. That would be really dumb, especially if any carbon certificates from this _will_ take the carbon footprint of the energy used into account.
So no, this is not a scam. The problem is that this is not a solution either. We would need 500'000 of that planned plant to go zero carbon footprint. That is wayyy out of reach unless we retool a major part of the world industry. Now, we cannot even agree to move that industry to reduce its carbon footprint or capture the CO2 generated were it is generated. If we cannot do the easier thing, we obviously cannot do the much harder one.
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What do you want to extract from the oceans???
Re:Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:4, Insightful)
What do you want to extract from the oceans???
Fuel. Here's how you do it:
1. Find some investors.
2. Use half their money to buy 10,000 tonnes of bunker fuel.
3. Use it to cruise around and scoop up 1000 tonnes of plastic.
4. Melt and refine the 1000 tonnes of plastic into 100 tonnes of diesel.
5. Use 100 tonnes of diesel to generate 10 kwh of electricity.
6. Use the electricity to extract a kilogram of CO2 from the atmosphere.
7. Use the other half of the money to pay yourself a nice bonus.
8. Profit!!!
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Their plants are in Iceland, which had clean power.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
At least these initial plants make use of resources seemingly unique to Iceland, which makes it work. For a few hundred dollars a month one could erase one's carbon footprint.
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The market price for a one-tonne carbon credit is about $40.
If you want to offset your carbon footprint, there are far better ways to do it.
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I'm not advocating for it, just saying that their initial plants do technically work, whether they work as a business remains to be seen. I certainly am not going pay what Climeworks is asking. I do support their concept of capturing CO2 and "dissolves carbon dioxide in water then intermingles that mixture with basalt rock formations. Natural processes convert the material to solid carbonate minerals in about two years." That process of converting the gas to solid is really interesting. Though I'm sure the
Re: Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:3)
We need all of the clean energy we can get
Re: Nobody ever questioned if the scam worked (Score:2)
I'm too lazy to read even the summary (you know where we are), but it seems possible to me that carbon can be isolated for less energy than burning stuff produces.
Similar to how we can move heat for less energy than the heat itself (heat pumps to cool or heat), it seems credible we can move carbon for less energy than we get burning things.
That being said, the summary seems to be implying that (using words like 'move') I have no idea of they succeeded.
But if all we're talking about is moving, it definitely
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It's in Iceland, and all their energy is renewable. Mostly geothermal.
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All these carbon capturing plans are just a scam to distract from the need to switch over to renewable energy and away from fossil fuels.
10 mn google search and you can see they are not scams, I found a good source but not in your language you can still check https://sdg.iisd.org/news/late... [iisd.org]. They will help to reduce co2 concentration but even at full scale they won't be enough. Carbon dioxide removal does work, we need to invest in them, it seems to be the current consensus.
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They questioned whether the scam actually helped slow climate change. And it doesn't. The amount of energy used versus the positive effects is that best nil and it worst a net negative or combating climate change. As in you burn more fossil fuels for the electricity needed to power this nonsense either directly or indirectly.
It's almost as if you think you need to burn fossil fuels to generate energy.
I'd have thought the clue would be in the fact that this is happening in Iceland, but noooo.
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It is indeed better to not produce CO2 in the first place.
But their is still too much in the air already and it still needs to be removed.
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My first thought was: congratulations, you've invented a tree.
Trees turn carbon dioxide into oxygen and wood. Then you bury the wood deep enough that instead of rotting (which would release the carbon) it starts its journey towards becoming coal.
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That locks away the nutrients. Better to turn into charcoal first.
Also their is still a scablablity problem in finding enough places to plant the trees.
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The amount of energy used versus the positive effects is that best nil and it worst a net negative or combating climate change. As in you burn more fossil fuels for the electricity needed to power this nonsense either directly or indirectly.
That's why they are doing it in Iceland.
All these carbon capturing plans are just a scam to distract from the need to switch over to renewable energy and away from fossil fuels.
This might at least be useful to replace burning of hydrocarbons for industrial CO2 inputs. DAC is new and until quite recently has received very little funding. Cost and energy requirements could change dramatically as technology matures.
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This facility is in Iceland. They have free unlimited geothermal power. No fossil fuels are involved
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A ton of CO2 represents about 112.5 gallons or about $370 worth of gasoline burned. This article obviously doesn't have real numbers, but it does say a few hundred dollars per ton. So the cost of the sequestration is on the same order as the cost of the fuel to create the carbon in the first place. It could possibly cost even more. If the cost of the process mostly reflects the energy cost, then that means that, if powered by fossil fuels, this process uses fossil fuel on the same order that it counteracts
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Burn a few solar panels?