“But with billions of tons of carbon dioxide already in the air, we must capture carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to slow and reverse the effects of climate change.” “ORNL is tackling climate change by developing numerous technologies that reduce or eliminate emissions,” said Susan Hubbard, ORNL deputy for science and technology. And so I think there’s proper scientific grounds to say, whoever wants to invest in this, let’s welcome the investment.An innovative and sustainable chemistry developed at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory for capturing carbon dioxide from air has been licensed to Holocene, a Knoxville-based startup focused on designing and building plants that remove carbon dioxide from atmospheric air. However, the problem we have with climate change is so enormous, that just having lots more windmills and Teslas might make us feel good, but it isn’t enough to solve the problem. Vaitheeswaran: It’s only right to be skeptical when an oil company says, “Hey, we’re gonna do this nice thing, and so we can keep pumping oil.” By all means. So real money, going into pilot phase projects that are ready to scale up to commercial level.īen-Achour: This technology has gotten some criticism - environmentalists who criticize Occidental and other oil companies for investing in this, basically saying it’s just an excuse for them to keep on pumping oil. government has just given a massive grant $1.2 billion for, specifically, this topic. But we have big money coming in from the oil industry. ![]() One of them, of course, is startup capital. A couple of streams of revenue have come into this. On the other hand, the UN’s scientific experts at the intergovernmental panel, IPCC, they argue that we need negative emissions technologies by 2050 if we’re going to deal with the century’s climate problems. Nobody suggests that direct air capture will solve our climate change problem. Vaitheeswaran: First, just to give a sense of perspective here: This is one tool in the toolkit. That’s the launch of a project that I attended, in a place called Notrees, Texas, in the Permian Basin, where America’s oil patch is.īen-Achour: Can you give us a sense of the scale of investment, both by the federal government and the private sector, into this particular technology? Based on that they were able to get a billion dollar project approval, in which Occidental, the big American oil company in which Warren Buffett has an investment, has decided to support them scaling this up in Texas. And I went up to a place outside of Vancouver where they have a pilot plant that they’d been working on for a number of years. I’ve been tracking this for over 15 years. It’s backed by Bill Gates and has been for a while. Vaitheeswaran: Yeah, Carbon Engineering is a really interesting company. And you apparently actually visited one of their pilot projects some time back. Or maybe you can use it to make fizzy drinks, or other industrial purposes.īen-Achour: So the firm that Occidental is acquiring is called Carbon Engineering. And then you can store it in the ground permanently, which would be the ideal solution. But we have come up with a few technologies that can suck it out of the air using chemicals. In effect, the carbon dioxide that’s in the air is very dispersed, it’s hard to capture. ![]() Vijay Vaitheeswaran: You know, that’s actually as good a description as anyone’s come up for it. Sabri Ben-Achour: Just to start, can you briefly explain how this technology works? So it’s like a vacuum cleaner, basically, that sucks carbon out of the air? The following is an edited transcript of their conversation. He spoke about this most recent development with “Marketplace Morning Report” host Sabri Ben-Achour. Vijay Vaitheeswaran, global energy and climate innovation editor at The Economist, has been following this technology and the companies pursuing it for years. government as a promising solution for fighting climate change. This “direct air capture” technology as it’s called has been seen by both industry and the U.S. ![]() oil and gas producer Occidental Petroleum struck a deal to pay more than $1 billion for a technology company, Carbon Engineering, that works on capturing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
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