The Hindu (Bangalore)

How innovative initiative­s are making green from grey in Karnataka

Initiative­s like CarbonCraf­t, String Bio and Clairco are trying to make a difference by harnessing emissions of different forms to make commercial value products

- Shilpa Elizabeth

Tejas Sidnal, an architect, used to think about building carbonnega­tive homes, structures that absorb more Carbon dioxide than they emit.

A concept which has started taking off in the West slowly, it is still far from reality in India.

Sidnal realised that it is impossible to build a carbon negative house if you don’t have carbon negative products and constructi­on materials in the first place. This was the beginning of CarbonCraf­t, a startup which aims to convert carbon emissions into building materials.

Since the beginning of the 21st century, global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and larger air pollution have been on an upward trend with the exception of the COVID19 period heating up the globe more and more, accelerati­ng climate change and contributi­ng to global health burden.

While the world is yet to see major success in reducing emissions and keeping pollution under check, a bunch of initiative­s like CarbonCraf­t are trying to make a difference by harnessing emissions of different forms to make commercial value products.

Harnessing methane

Methane constitute­s about 16% percent of total GHG emissions today.

Bengalurub­ased bio tech startup String Bio’s gas fermentati­on technology converts methane into commercial products such as protein for feed, crop inputs for agricultur­e and protein for humangrade food.

“All our products have a very differentiated USP for the customer in each market we are looking at. But the overall benefit of this is that there’s a certain carbon offset enabled both in the manufactur­ing process as well as from the point of use,” says Dr. Ezhil Subbian, CEO and cofounder at String Bio.

The company works with biogas plants as well as firms in the oil and gas sector to source methane. String Bio’s first plant was set up in Bengaluru about five years back.

“At the plant, methane goes into our fermenters where it gets converted and processed into these products that we’re making,” Dr. Subbian explains.

The company, which has used the products from its first plant to seed the market, understand product market fit and optimise operations, is currently in the process of scaling up production capacity and driving market adoption for the products. It also has plans to set up a larger facility in the coming days.

“Products for animal feed and Agri are in the market right now, and we are looking at driving market adoption for them. For products in the food protein sector, we are going through our regulatory process,” Dr. Subbian notes. According to her, the future areas of interest of String Bio includes cosmetics and sustainabl­e material space.

Carbon dioxide constitute­s more than 75% of global green house gas emissions.

Capturing carbon

When Sidnal of CarbonCraf­t started working on carbon negative building products, his first idea was to make carbon negative bricks. But realising it was difficult to build a value propositio­n out of a commodity that goes inside the structure and is not externally visible, he switched to tiles, which, in his own words, ‘have more value addition to aesthetics.’

“We convert carbon emissions into building materials in a fourstage process involving collect, process, build, and cure,” says Sidnal.

The startup partners with tyre recycling factories to collect solid carbon and is looking to work with Direct Air Capture companies to collect gaseous carbon.

The collected carbon is processed at the startup’s facility in Hubballi. It is fused with a mixture of binder and reinforcem­ent materials to build the tiles. The manufactur­ing of tiles is outsourced to a unit in Morbi.

“The curing part is still under R&D. But we’re selling the tile produced after the first three stages. The challenge with the fourth stage is that it currently takes 30 days to cure the tile. We would like to reduce it to a day,” explains Sidnal.

According to him while a convention­al tile is 7 kgs CO2 equivalent per square feet, CarbonCraf­t’s carbonnega­tive tile has a CO2 equivalent of 1.1 kg per square feet. The startup is currently at a capacity of producing 10,000 square feet a month.

CO2 in constructi­on

Researcher­s at the Centre for Sustainabl­e Technologi­es (CST), Indian Institute of Science (IISc), have also been exploring ways to harness carbon dioxide emissions produced from industrial flue gas and store them in excavated soil and C&D waste, which could then be used to partially replace natural sand.

Flue gas is a mixture of gases produced as a result of combustion in factories, industrial units and power stations and pushed out through tall chimneys.

Souradeep Gupta, Assistant Professor at CST, and team has been working on the technology.

According to the institute, the team has shown that replacing natural sand with carbon dioxidetre­ated C&D waste in mortar and then curing it in a controlled, CO2rich environmen­t can speed up the developmen­t of the material’s engineerin­g properties, and enhance its compressiv­e strength by 2022%.

Clean air and coasters

Aayush Jha started thinking about air purification solutions when his father, who moved to Delhi a few years back, was admitted in hospital with difficulties after inhaling PM2.5.

PM2.5 are fine particulat­e matter that is produced mostly as a result of emissions resulting from combustion of gas, oil, wood and so on, and a major reason for the severe air pollution in Delhi during winters.

Jha cofounded Bengalurub­ased Clairco which has developed a filter that would help to clean the air once retrofitted in the AC systems, and offers ‘clean air as a service’ to large commercial establishm­ents. With Orion Mall in Bengaluru as their first client the startup today manages around 100 buildings that add up to about 15 million square feet and.

The second business model of the company is ‘energy efficiency as a service’ where Clairco retrofits its IoT sensors to the air conditioni­ng systems of its clients.

These sensors that can measure about 11 parametres in real time optimise the functionin­g of the AC. According to Jha this helps to save around 30% energy.

While the primary business model of Clairco has been around clean air and energy efficiency, the company partners with a Gujaratbas­ed upcycler to make coasters and tiles using PM 2.5 emissions. The coasters are made out of PM 2.5 and filters, while the tiles have the extra ingredient of ferrous oxide to make them stronger.

With Air Conditione­rs being responsibl­e for around 4% of global GHG emissions, Clairco also attempted capturing the CO2 emissions from the AC systems, without much success, neverthele­ss.

“We will try again once we have some funding for it,” says Jha.

 ?? ?? Tiles being made at a unit in Morbi.
Tiles being made at a unit in Morbi.
 ?? ?? A tile made by CarbonCraf­t which converts CO2 emissions into building materials.
A tile made by CarbonCraf­t which converts CO2 emissions into building materials.
 ?? ?? Ezhil Subbian
Ezhil Subbian
 ?? ?? Tejas Sidnal
Tejas Sidnal
 ?? ?? Aayush Jha
Aayush Jha

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