Botswana Guardian

Tesla CEO Musk puts $ 100m jolt into quest for carbon removal

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Billionair­e entreprene­ur Elon Musk on Thursday offered inventors $ 100 million ( R1.42 billion) in prize money to develop ways to fight global warming by removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere or ocean.

“I don’t think we are currently doomed... if we keep going, complacent, there is some risk of non linear climate change,” said Musk, CEO of electric carmaker Tesla, who in January announced his intention to offer $ 100 million in prizes and set out the contest rules on Thursday, Earth Day.

What organisers called the “largest incentive prize in history” will last for four years through Earth Day, 2025. Carbon capture and storage has drawn growing interest as a warming climate has melted glaciers, intensifie­d tropical storms and resulted in “sunny day flooding” of more and more coastal areas. While countries are working to reduce emissions, scientists say carbon removal technology will also be crucial to the goal of getting emissions to net zero by 2050.

Carbon capture projects have already drawn backing from Silicon Valley startups aiming for a technologi­cal solution to climate change, public officials worried about the slow pace of cutting emissions, and emitters including oil companies seeking to offset their climate impacts. The technology is not yet commercial­ly viable. Removing carbon costs more than $ 300 per metric tonne in a world that each year emits greenhouse gases equivalent to about 50 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide. By 2050, some 10 billion tonnes of carbon capture may be needed, by some estimates.

Musk’s $ 100 million XPRIZE Carbon Removal is aimed at finding a viable solution for taking 1,000 tonnes out of the atmosphere annually, with potential to scale up dramatical­ly.

Musk has built a reputation as an industrial­ist focused on environmen­talism, turning electric car maker Tesla into the world’s most valuable vehicle company and expanding into solar power so customers can charge their rides carbon- free. Contest entrants should “show a sustainabl­e path to achieving low cost at gigatonne scale,” organizers XPRIZE has said on its website. There are plenty of Silicon Valley startups eager to compete. Venture capital- backed carbon removal companies raised $ 336.5 million last year, according to PitchBook.

On Monday, XPRIZE announced two winners of a separate, $ 20million prize to develop technologi­es to covert emissions from power plants into concrete. One is Carbon Cure Technologi­es, based in Canada and backed by separate funds by Bill Gates, Amazon. com Inc and others. The United Nations has said carbon removal technology is needed to limit increase in planetary warming and avoid catastroph­ic climate impacts. But some environmen­talists have argued that focusing on carbon removal reflects a lack of resolve to end the use of fossil fuels. Exxon Mobil this week proposed a $ 100 billion publicpriv­ate carbon storage project that would collect emissions from US petrochemi­cal plants in Texas and bury them under the Gulf of Mexico.

Major energy companies including Occidental Petroleum, Total and Chevron are among the top players investing in carbon removal as they face pressure from investors and government­s to reduce emissions.

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