US Senators Introduce Carbon Capture, Sequestration Bill ttnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ttnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
(Algae Biomass Organization) … Algae, encompassing photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic aquatic organisms including microalgae and seaweeds (macroalgae), create a highly versatile and tunable platform for the development of fuels and products. In most cases, large scale algae production can be done on marginal land, including the underdeveloped coastal area around the US
[4] that is unsuitable for food crops. Algae farms can currently produce over 60 metric tons of dry biomass per hectare per year[5] and may consume up to 1.8 kg of CO2 per kg of biomass[6]. Thus, algae farming – microalgae and macroalgae (seaweed) – plays a potentially significant role in carbon capture
4.
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State of the art catalytic upgrading of algae-derived oils and products creates fuels and products that are completely tunable to material applications and drop-in fuels including biodiesel, marine-grade diesel and jet fuel.
Cooling Towers Can Be Converted Into Carbon Capture Devices intelligentliving.co - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from intelligentliving.co Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
> Bio-CCS’ role on path to net-zero – dependent on legislative framework’s recognition of shipping and CO2 storage
Bio-CCS’ role on path to net-zero – dependent on legislative framework’s recognition of shipping and CO2 storage
Tapping into ongoing discussions in Sweden on Bio-CCS’ vital role on the path to net-zero by 2050, Fabian Levihn from Stockholm EXERGI had a chat with us on the ongoing revision of the TEN-E Regulation. Main takeaways? Transport modalities other than pipeline are pivotal for project development in Sweden, as well as the availability of abroad CO2 storage.
Bio-CCS’ role on path to net-zero – dependent on legislative framework’s recognition of shipping and CO2 storage
by Robert Hunziker / March 12th, 2021
CNBC recently produced a 17-min video about direct air capture (DAC) and corporations, specifically big oil, funding R&D operations. The video discusses the basic technology, as well as some pitfalls. Direct air capture is in early stages of developing technology to remove atmospheric CO2.
By implication, the oil giants are clearly aware of what’s at stake (a) the planet is stressed almost beyond limits (b) there’s some money to be made trying to fix it (c) it’s a great PR gig. But, the problem is much bigger and more complex than oil and gas betting on early stage development of technology to capture the same emissions they created in the first instance. Direct air capture is complex and expensive with sizeable infrastructure requirements, explained in further detail hereinafter, a real eye-opener.