Video: Carbon capture is key to reducing greenhouse gases. Iceland’s new CO2-fixing facility is a tiny step toward that goal

Credit: Carbfix
Credit: Carbfix

As the world prepares for another UN Climate Change Conference, scientists are still searching for a cheap and easy way to dispose of the primary greenhouse gas – carbon dioxide.

A new Icelandic facility might be the answer. The Orca plant, powered by geothermal energy, sucks air into the collector with a fan. Once it’s inside, it sits on a highly sensitive filter. The filter collects CO2 which is then heated up and buried in the ground where it eventually turns to rock.

This so-called direct air carbon capture facility isn’t the only way to take carbon out of the atmosphere. It can be removed at the source or from the fuel before combustion.

Stanford Professor Arun Majumdar, a former U.S. Energy Department scientist, says carbon capture is key to reducing greenhouse gas. He says wind, solar and electric batteries are not enough to make a difference.

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CNN reports the Orca facility “removes about 10 metric tons of CO2 every month, which is roughly the same amount of carbon emitted by 800 cars a day in the U.S.” But the impact is miniscule. Humans emit 50 billion tons of greenhouse gases a year, according to Our World in Data.

This is an excerpt. Read the original post here.

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