Displaying 1 - 25 of 38
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Startling data in climate expert Nat Bullard’s annual report signals that carbon removal is not scaling fast enough to limit the climate crisis.
2
Article
The first large U.S. hub to stash and store CO2 is bound for Louisiana. A new report outlines its essential elements.
by Jesse Klein
3
Article
Government incentives have bolstered the carbon removals sector, but should that money be helping heavy industry capture their emissions or uplift technologies that are already low emitters?
by Jesse Klein
4
Article
Here’s how the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is leading and lagging in climate regulatory design.
5
Article
The EPA is promoting carbon capture and storage tech to cap emissions from fossil fuel-powered utilities.
by Leah Garden
6
Article
How much more CO2 can the ocean swallow, without harming sensitive ecosystems?
7
Article
CCS is either the climate tech breakthrough of the 21st century, according to its advocates, or a multibillion-dollar boondoggle, say activists.
by John Howell
8
Article
Icelandic company Carbfix has cracked the code on converting liquified CO2 into rock, leading the charge to capture and store excess carbon.
by Leah Garden
9
Article
Launched by Stripe this spring, Frontier has announced its first six project winners: AspiraDAC (a subsidiary of Corporate Carbon), Calcite-Origen (a collaboration between 8 Rivers and Origen), Lithos, RepAir, Travertine and Living Carbon.
by Leah Garden
10
Article
Long discussed but rarely used, carbon capture and storage projects — which bury waste CO2 underground — are on the rise globally. Some scientists see the technology as a necessary tool in reducing emissions, but others say it simply perpetuates the burning of fossil fuels.
by Nicola Jones
11
Article
The focus is to help scale the availability of solutions that cost less than $100 per metric ton.
12
Article
A breakthrough innovation in carbon capture has profound implications for jobs across America.
13
Article
The industry needs to share lessons, so companies are publishing playbooks about how they are selecting and valuing projects that have verifiable permanence.
14
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As captured carbon becomes a popular way to decarbonize the planet, we need to think about the pipes that will hold that carbon and if they are up to code.
by Amy Mall
15
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The bipartisan infrastructure bill lays the groundwork for new economic opportunities based on capturing and sequestering carbon emissions.
16
Article
Made of Air locks away carbon from wood waste into a durable plastic for buildings, cars and furniture.
17
Article
Keeping trees in the ground where they are already growing is an effective low-tech way to slow climate change.
by Beverly Law
18
Article
Ultimately, a real solution to the global CO2 crisis necessitates collaboration between sectors and individual innovators.
19
Article
As more companies seek direct methods of removing excess CO2, the innovation ecosystem is taking shape.
20
Article
New technology allows craft breweries to capture its CO2 for later use or even to sell on in the market.
by Jesse Klein
21
Article
New research indicates that parts of the Amazon and other tropical forests are emitting more CO2 than they absorb. Some scientists are concerned about this development.
by Fred Pearce
22
Article
Cost, volume potential, longevity and verifiability were among the key selection criteria.
23
Article
Many things are in flux but there are significant supplies of waste carbon from global industrial emissions worldwide for companies to use.
24
Article
There's an emerging market to pay farmers to store more carbon in the soil by using improved agricultural practices. But some scientists are questioning whether these efforts will actually help slow global warming.
25
Article
Planting and protecting forests in remote areas of the world may be challenging. But another trend may help matters.
by Jim Giles