San Antonio Express-News

Carbon-sucking plant puts dent in emissions

- By Ragnhildur Sigurdardo­ttir and Akshat Rathi BLOOMBERG

In Iceland’s barren landscape, a new container-like structure has risen alongside plumes of steam near the Hellisheid­i geothermal power plant. Its job is to undo some of the damage carbon-dioxide emissions are wrecking on the planet.

The facility, called Orca and built by Swiss startup Climeworks, will suck CO2 out of the air. Icelandic startup Carbfix will then pump it deep into the ground, turning it into stone forever. Of the 16 installati­ons Climeworks has built across Europe, Orca is the only one that permanentl­y disposes of the CO2 rather than recycling it.

The plant will capture 4,000 tons of CO2 a year, making it the largest direct-air capture facility in the world. But that only makes up for the annual emissions of about 250 U.S. residents. It’s also a long way from the company’s original goal of capturing 1 percent of annual global CO2 emissions — more than 300 million tons — by 2025. The company is now targeting 500,000 tons by the end of the decade.

The company still hopes to one day reach its 300 million-ton target, “but the timeline has changed as it takes longer than we originally anticipate­d to build up an entire industry,” said Jan Wurzbacher, one of Climeworks’ cofounders. “Already the demand for carbon removal at Orca is so high that we have decided to scale up this plant and build a roughly 10 times larger plant in about three years.”

Investment is pouring into carbon capture as companies and government­s search for ways to tame global warming that’s already causing devastatin­g weather events. Still, activists argue that focusing too much on carbon-removal technologi­es could become a distractio­n from the work of immediatel­y reducing emissions.

The main challenge for Climeworks is lowering the cost of its service. Individual­s wanting to purchase carbon offsets can pay the company up to $1,200 per ton

of CO2. For bulk purchases, such as those made by Bill Gates, the cost is closer to $600 per ton.

Climeworks aims to get that cost down to $200 to $300 a ton by 2030, and to $100 to $200 by the middle of next decade, when its operations are at full scale, Wurzbacher said. With European carbon prices at 62 euros ($73) a ton and many betting it will go above $100 soon, the lower end of Climeworks’s target price would make it cheaper for polluters to use Climeworks than pay the penalty.

Climeworks’ targets are reasonable compared with the billions of dollars paid annually in subsidies for electric vehicles, which price a ton of avoided CO2 at about $500, said Christoph Gebald, the other co-founder at Climeworks. “If this existed for what we are doing, we would scale up much faster,” he said.

Orca cost $10 million to $15 million to build, including constructi­on, site developmen­t and storage, according to Wurzbacher. “The cost per ton of Orca is perhaps less important than what we will learn, to get quicker to the

large scale and ultimately lower prices,” he said.

Climeworks is backed by a group of private investors, as well as Swiss bank Zuercher Kantonalba­nk. It also has debt financing commitment­s from Microsoft Corp.’s climate innovation fund. While still unprofitab­le, the bulk of Climeworks’ revenue comes from corporate customers including Microsoft, Stripe Inc., Shopify Inc. and Swiss Re AG. In addition, 8,000 private customers have also signed up. Wurzbacher predicts that subscriber­s will eventually provide half of the Climeworks’ revenue.

Carbon capture and storage, or CCS, falls in two categories of technologi­es. Capturing emissions from the smokestack­s of factories or power plants before they escape into the atmosphere is a lot cheaper. With current technology, the cost can be as low as $40 a ton, according to Bloombergn­ef That’s because the concentrat­ion of CO2 in those gases can be as high as 10 percent, rather than 0.04 percent in the air.

Climeworks takes the harder route by filtering air itself, meaning

there’s a limit to how cheap its technology can get because the process is very energy intensive.

The Orca plant draws in large amounts of air with huge fans, bringing the air in contact with chemicals that can selectivel­y remove CO2 while releasing nitrogen, oxygen and other gases back into the atmosphere. The carbonrich chemicals are then heated to about 100°C to release CO2 as a pure gas.

Carbfix mixes the gas with water and injects it deep into basaltic rock. The dissolved CO2 crystalliz­es into a mineral in about two years, permanentl­y storing it away. The energy for all those steps comes from the Hellisheid­i geothermal plant.

Replicatin­g that combinatio­n of factors — basaltic rock and cheap zero-carbon energy — at another location won’t be easy. It’s possible to store CO2 in other geological formations where they don’t turn into rock, akin to what happens to oil and gas. But using zero-carbon energy is key, otherwise the process could generate more CO2 than it stores.

Wurzbacher said the location of the next, bigger plant will be confirmed in a few months. Iceland remains “a very attractive location,” he said, alongside Oman and Norway.

Carbfix sees opportunit­y in continuing to expand its collaborat­ion with Climeworks. “We will not reach our climate goals without large-scale carbon capture and storage,” said Edda Sif Pind Aradottir, chief executive officer of Carbfix. Iceland alone could store more than a 100 times what’s needed globally to meet the Paris agreement, she said.

The United Nations-backed Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change considers CCS a crucial technology to help meet climate goals. In most scenarios, the world will have to capture and bury billions of tons of CO2 each year to keep global warming below 1.5°C relative to the pre-industrial period, in addition to drasticall­y reducing emissions.

Climeworks was founded around the same time as two other direct-air capture startups. U.s.-based Global Thermostat LLC, which uses technology similar to Climeworks, abandoned a venture with Exxon Mobil Corp. to build a plant that would capture 4,000 tons per year — the scale Orca has now achieved. Canada-based Carbon Engineerin­g Ltd. has a working prototype that can capture about 300 tons per year. It’s now working with Occidental Petroleum Corp. to build a plant that can capture 1 million tons of CO2 from the air annually.

Oil and gas companies, which have been using CCS technology to eke out more oil from aging fields, have the expertise to scale up the technology quickly. That’s one reason direct air capture companies have partnered with them, but Climeworks has resisted that urge.

Gebald says it is important for the company to remain independen­t from the strategic interests of the oil and gas companies, though it’s open to partnershi­ps as long as that independen­ce isn’t compromise­d.

“I actually think it’s a big advantage because many customers praise us for this and pick us because we don’t have these associatio­ns,” Wurzbacher said.

 ?? Arnaldur Halldorsso­n / Bloomberg ?? Christoph Gebald and Jan Wurzbacher, co-founders of Climeworks, have built a facility in Iceland that will suck carbon dioxide out of the air. Then it will be pumped into the ground.
Arnaldur Halldorsso­n / Bloomberg Christoph Gebald and Jan Wurzbacher, co-founders of Climeworks, have built a facility in Iceland that will suck carbon dioxide out of the air. Then it will be pumped into the ground.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States