SCIENTISTS DIM SUNLIGHT, SUCK UP CARBON DIOXIDE TO COOL PLANET
OSLO— Scientists are sucking carbon dioxide from the air with giant fans and preparing to release chemicals from a balloon to dim the sun’s rays as part of a climate engineering push to cool the planet.
Backers say the risky, often expensive projects are urgently needed to find ways of meeting the goals of the Paris climate deal to curb global warming that researchers blame for causing more heat waves, downpours and rising sea levels.
Offtrack targets
The United Nations says the targets are way offtrack and will not be met simply by reducing emissions—for example, from factories or cars—particularly after US President Donald Trump’s decision to pull out of the 2015 pact.
They are pushing for other ways to keep temperatures down.
In the countryside near Zurich, Swiss company Climeworks began to suck greenhouse gases from thin air in May with giant fans and filters in a $23million project that it calls the world’s first “commercial carbon dioxide capture plant.”
Worldwide, “direct air capture” research by a handful of companies such as Climeworks has gained tens of millions of dollars in recent years from sources including governments, Microsoft founder Bill Gates and the European Space Agency.
Radical step
If buried underground, vast amounts of greenhouse gases extracted from the air would help reduce global temperatures, a radical step beyond cuts in emissions that are the main focus of the Paris Agreement.
Climeworks reckons it now costs about $600 to extract a ton of carbon dioxide from the air and the plant’s full capacity due by the end of 2017 is only 900 tons a year.
That’s equivalent to the annual emissions of only 45 Americans.
And Climeworks sells the gas, at a loss, to nearby greenhouses as fertilizer to grow tomatoes and cucumbers, and has a partnership with carmaker Audi, which hopes to use carbon in greener fuels.
Jan Wurzbacher, director and founder of Climeworks, says the company has planet-altering ambitions by cutting costs to about $100 a ton and capturing 1 percent of global man-made carbon emissions a year by 2025.—