20 April 2021, 2:53 am EDT By ( Getty Images (Christopher Furlong) )
Climate Change is set to be trampled by a technology based in Iceland. The technology is reportedly called Direct Air Capture.
Earth s Climate is Warming up Fast
The need to combat Climate Change has never been more apparent in recent years as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported that there hasn t been as much carbon dioxide in the world s atmosphere in over three hundred years than how it currently is right now.
According to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.(NASA) Climate Change is a change in the usual weather found in a place. It said the researchers who study the Earth s climate can attest how the world is getting warmer due to the accumulation of greenhouse gasses produced by various human activities
‘Trash Collectors of the Air: The Tool That Could Help Save the Planet UCSD researcher Ryan Hanna explains how the Direct Air Capture systems works and what the world must do to face a growing climate crisis By Tom Jones •
Updated 2 hours ago
NBC Universal, Inc.
In the global fight pinning the world’s population against rising temperatures and natural disasters brought on by a climate crisis, carbon is the main opponent.
Researchers are racing to find ways to not only reduce new carbon emissions into our atmosphere but also to scrub away carbon that’s already in our air.
‘Trash Collectors of the Air: The Tool That Could Help Save the Planet UCSD researcher Ryan Hanna explains how the Direct Air Capture systems works and what the world must do to face a growing climate crisis By Tom Jones •
Updated 2 hours ago
NBC Universal, Inc.
In the global fight pinning the world’s population against rising temperatures and natural disasters brought on by a climate crisis, carbon is the main opponent.
Researchers are racing to find ways to not only reduce new carbon emissions into our atmosphere but also to scrub away carbon that’s already in our air.
‘Trash Collectors of the Air: The Tool That Could Help Save the Planet UCSD researcher Ryan Hanna explains how the Direct Air Capture systems works and what the world must do to face a growing climate crisis By Tom Jones •
Updated 10 mins ago
NBC Universal, Inc.
In the global fight pinning the world’s population against rising temperatures and natural disasters brought on by a climate crisis, carbon is the main opponent.
Researchers are racing to find ways to not only reduce new carbon emissions into our atmosphere but also to scrub away carbon that’s already in our air.
Direct Air Capture (DAC) systems can filter air molecules like filtering a glass of water, to not only remove CO2 from ambient air, but assist with storing.