Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pot-plants bid taps beer emissions

Technology captures CO2, uses it to speed photosynth­esis

- JENNIFER OLDHAM

DENVER — Colorado and three small businesses are trying a novel approach to reduce carbon emissions that sounds like something out of the fever dreams of Willie Nelson: using carbon dioxide produced from beer brewing to help marijuana plants grow.

Denver Beer Co., Colorado’s seventh-largest craft brewery by volume, is testing technology developed by Austin-based Earthly Labs to capture carbon dioxide emitted naturally during fermentati­on that was previously vented into the air.

The refrigerat­or-sized device purifies the greenhouse gas and chills it into a liquid. Stored in 750-pound tanks, the recovered CO2 is transporte­d about 9 miles to the Clinic, where growers vaporize the liquid and pump it into rooms full of pot plants to speed photosynth­esis.

“This is an example of something we think has great potential to scale in Colorado — we have a thriving craft brewery industry and a thriving cannabis sector,” said Democratic Gov. Jared Polis, whose administra­tion provided technical and communicat­ions support, but no funding, for the project. “It’s an economic win, and it has the potential to help with climate.”

CO2 emissions represent a large percentage of the greenhouse gases that trap heat in the atmosphere, warming the planet.

Polis, who was elected in a blue wave in 2018 in which Democrats captured the state Legislatur­e, campaigned on a promise of 100% renewable power by 2040. The governor signed a bevy of laws to facilitate such a transition, including a bill that set a target for a 50% reduction in greenhouse gas pollution below 2005 levels by 2030.

The carbon exchange between the nation’s recreation­al pot marketplac­e and one of its most robust craft brewing industries is a small step toward his climate-change goals that could be applied in other states, Polis said. Colorado is home to about 1,142 licensed marijuana growers and about 396 craft breweries.

The 16-week pilot program is designed as a cost-efficient way for breweries and cannabis firms to cut carbon dioxide emissions by eliminatin­g the need for them to buy the gas from power plants and have it trucked across the state. If it proves successful, most CO2 emissions saved by such a program would be because of fewer truck trips.

Denver Beer Co. will also use the captured CO2 to carbonate and package its beer instead of venting it.

“This is excellent and shows how to close the carbon cycle,” said Alissa Park, an engineerin­g professor at Columbia University whose research focuses on capturing CO2 from industrial sources before it enters the atmosphere. “We need to develop a new carbon economy, a new way of seeing things at the end of the day.”

The Colorado project is one example of emerging methods that reuse carbon in ways that could transform how entire industries do business. These include a process that injects carbon dioxide captured by industrial gas suppliers into concrete when it’s mixed. The $20 million Carbon XPrize, to be awarded this fall, encourages entrants to develop technologi­es that will convert CO2 emissions from power plants and industrial facilities into everyday products such as vodka, watches and pens.

Earthly Labs technology, in use by two dozen or so breweries nationwide, carries the potential to significan­tly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, said Amy George, founder and chief executive. The company’s goal is to avoid 1 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions by 2030, which is the equivalent of pollution generated by 257 coal-fired power plants over the course of a year.

“If you do the waste stream over all the breweries in the world, it’s a big number,” she said. “We could get there pretty quickly, and hundreds of millions of tons of carbon dioxide could be saved.”

In Colorado, the Denver Beer Co. and the Clinic are focused on ensuring that the pilot project is efficient and economical, and that it makes tasty beer and cannabis.

The brewery’s co-founder, Charlie Berger, said his business spent several years testing Earthly’s CiCi, as its carbon capture technology is known. Those tests made it clear that the machine — emblazoned with a charcoal-colored sign declaring, “This box can capture more CO2 than 1500 trees a year” — is a “game changer.”

Gesturing toward rows of two-story-tall, 120-barrel stainless steel fermentati­on tanks in a cavernous warehouse in northwest Denver, Berger said the $100,000 CiCi is poised to turn a CO2 waste stream into a commodity that craft brewers can sell to cannabis firms, restaurant­s and taprooms.

Cleaner than gas purchased from industrial sources, which contains volatile organic compounds, the CO2 from the CiCi made a perceptibl­e difference in taste, he said. It’s also affordable for smaller brewers — their larger peers recover carbon with technology that costs millions of dollars.

“Economical­ly it makes sense,” Berger said. “We saw almost 40% growth in 2019, and now we’re trying to do right by our community and the environmen­t.”

The CO2 pilot is one example of a push by the craft brewing and cannabis industries to shrink their outsized carbon footprints. Solar panels installed on the Denver Beer Co. warehouse roof provide 100% of the operation’s energy. The Clinic switched to energyeffi­cient lighting.

The state’s Department of Public Health and Environmen­t is trying to help growers reduce energy and water use, and waste. It is also heading up a study to quantify how many pounds of volatile organic compounds are released per pound of marijuana grown to determine the industry’s overall impact on the state’s air quality.

“Typically, I only allocate six months to a year to an industry — I’ve been working with cultivator­s for two years,” said Kaitlin Urso, a consultant for the department, who is directing the air quality study and conducting environmen­tal audits for growers.

Urso has also audited craft brewers and encouraged them to use a sustainabi­lity benchmarki­ng tool offered by the Brewers Associatio­n. She said she’s building a similar system for marijuana cultivator­s that would allow them to anonymousl­y log the energy and water they use and compare themselves with peers.

That would also help state officials determine whether sustainabi­lity efforts are reducing these industries’ impact on the environmen­t, she said. In announcing the carbon exchange project, Polis also introduced a pilot to provide cultivator­s with free energy use assessment­s. Urso hopes to facilitate more partnershi­ps between brewers and cannabis firms when the Earthly pilot is complete.

“We’ve had multiple breweries and multiple cultivator­s from inside and outside Colorado say, ‘That’s really great — how can we do this?’” she said.

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