The Independent

Plucked from thin air

Elon Musk is offering $100m for the best carbon capture technology, but the truth is there are already many ways to take carbon out of the atmosphere,

- writes Andy Martin

If you could go back in time and reverse the history of the 20th century, where would you start – and where would you stop? Bump off Hitler perhaps (and/or Stalin/Pol Pot, etc). Maybe save JFK. Call a halt to the Holocaust. Or, bearing in the mind the climate change catastroph­e that is now upon us, what about trying to stop the juggernaut of the oil industry in its tracks, neutralise Exxon, Esso and BP, and thereby cool global warming?

The good news is that this science fiction fantasy – a kind of palindromi­c history – is starting to happen: at least the last bit. It is now possible to rewind the movie and put fossil fuels right back where they came from and were safely stored for millions of years, in the interior of the Earth, not flowing and floating around the exterior. The nascent carbon capture industry is plucking CO2 right out of the air and diverting it down other much safer avenues (in the business, “removal” refers to extracting molecules already in the

atmosphere, whereas “capture” operates on the source of emissions; I use “carbon capture” to include both).

Obviously we have been talking about it – from Hollywood to Holyrood. But the point about carbon capture is that it is moving out of the realm of pure talk and into the more important realm of people who are actually doing it.

I recently spoke to a finance specialist about carbon capture and he said that it was great, and it would happen, but there was as yet no way to make it commercial – “costs are prohibitiv­e”. But it turns out he’s wrong – it’s already happening and it’s now possible to make it work economical­ly too.

In 2007 Richard Branson launched his Virgin Earth Challenge, offering a prize of $25m for the best carbon capture technology company. Ten thousand wannabes stepped forward. In 2019, Branson shut the scheme down, having handed out no prizes. But in January this year, Elon Musk launched a new climate beauty contest, offering a full $100m to serious carbon capturers, able to pull at least a ton a day out of the air or the ocean. This time somebody has to win, I reckon. And there is no shortage of contenders. Momentum behind new kinds of carbon-munching tech has been building in 2020.

In the pre-industrial revolution era, atmospheri­c CO2 stood at around 280 parts per million. When we started measuring it in 1958 14,000 feet up at the beautiful Mauna Loa mountainto­p observator­y in Hawaii, it was 316 ppm; now it’s well over 400; in another 50 years we will hit 500 (if we follow the “Keeling Curve”). Bill Gates estimates 51 billion tons (US) of greenhouse gases per annum going up in smoke. Temperatur­es will keep soaring, forests will keep burning, islands will go under, glaciers will melt, corals will die and jellyfish will take over the oceans. Unless we can do something about it.

Very few companies actually want to emit greenhouse gases – and least of all to be known as dirty. Everyone (eg Patagonia, Unilever, Ikea) is running around trying to reduce their carbon footprint, minimising the amount of emissions and offsetting like mad. But the fundamenta­l reality is we will never reduce it quite enough in this century. Look at all those industries (like steel and cement) who basically can’t eradicate their dependence on fossil fuels. So we have no option but to claw back the CO2 out of the atmosphere where it ends up if we want to keep increased warming down to 1.5 degrees (the maximum proposed by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change). The simple but inescapabl­e equation is that “if we want to get to net-zero we have to subtract as much CO2 as we are adding”, says Albert Howard, head of sustainabi­lity at Sourceful.

Think of all those old movies in which oil is gushing up out of the ground. Now rewind the film. Shove the black stuff back in again

No one has yet captured the Elon Musk prize, but three outstandin­g carbon capturers from around the world have recently been spotlighte­d by Sourceful Climate. “We’re pointing the way,” says Howard. Sourceful do good things to the supply chain, helping other companies to clean up their act and source the right stuff to make their products more sustainabl­e. They are already shrinking carbon footprints. Now they have backed their three carbon removal companies, nominated by an independen­t panel of academics, with an offer of 1:1 funding to match other contributi­ons.

One of them, Greensand, based in the Netherland­s, has already been around for a few years. It began back in 2008 when Eddy Wijnker went to the Beijing Olympics. Wijnker had started off as lead guitar in a Dutch rock band but morphed into a sound engineer. He was supposed to be in Beijing to keep an ear on the sound systems, but he got sidetracke­d by a green stone that nearly hit him on the head in the middle of an earthquake. That stone turned out to be olivine.

Olivine is a naturally occurring mineral – it makes up some 25 per cent of the Earth’s crust – but Wijnker discovered that it has the wonderful property (like trees) of being able to absorb CO2. For the last 12 years Wijnker has been trying to persuade the world to replace the use of sand and stone with olivine. And it looks as if he is succeeding. Rotterdam has bought 16,000 tons for its railroad and bus paths. Every ton of olivine will remove a ton of CO2.

But everyone can chip in, no matter how humble. You can buy a two kilo bag of olivine for your back garden for around €5 – thereby capturing two kilos of CO2. You can have a rock garden or a gravel path made out of greensand. Wijnker has a vision of the beaches of the future that have – literally and metaphoric­ally – gone green. It’s not quite a world in a grain of greensand, but it’s close.

The process of carbon capturing already happens in nature but it’s slow. “For three billion years the planet has been doing that. We just need to do it more.” Wijnker has sped it up by grinding olivine down to fragments or sand – greensand. The smaller the stone the faster the sequestrat­ion. All that is needed is rain to persuade the carbon dioxide to bond with the stone. And it’s good for your plants too since it releases magnesium and silicate. “If everyone sprinkles a bit of it we solve the problem,” says Wijnker. Or as Professor Olaf Schuiling (Wijnker calls him his “spiritual father”) puts it in his book, Olivine, the Philosophe­r’s Stone, “Let the Earth help save the Earth.”

You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to work on carbon capture, but it probably helps. Fortunatel­y, Shaun Meehan is a rocket scientist, or was until recently. Meehan started off as a teenager working in a laser lab for fun. And he spent a couple of years at the South Pole, before joining Planet Inc and launching satellites and designing his own rocket. Now, as chief scientist heading up R&D at Charm Industrial, his focus is more terrestria­l. Where Greensand was simple and low tech, Charm is more complex and definitely higher tech and, not surprising­ly, based in San Francisco. “I love tech,” says Meehan. “I’m constantly working on this stuff.” He and his girlfriend, Kelly Hering (a mechanical engineer and CTO at Charm), like to discuss hardware and software over lunch and restore old robots in their spare time. Behind them they have a team of 12 “kind engineers” who are highly “mission-motivated”.

Think of all those old movies (or even The Beverly Hillbillie­s) in which oil is gushing up out of the ground. Now rewind the film. Shove the black stuff back in again. That’s what Charm are doing with their “bio-oil sequestrat­ion”. We need to remember that a lot of carbon is already captured in soil and plants. So-called “biomass” is grass or wood or agricultur­al waste from farms and backyards. “People have tried to make it work as a fuel,” says Meehan. “Our discovery was that it doesn’t have a high energy content but it does have a high carbon content.” Their technique consists of taking biomass and converting it into oil and then reinjectin­g that back into the Earth’s crust whence it came.

All those old oil wells can be re-utilised – but in reverse, in what is known as “negative emission”. Ironically, there is a symmetry between Charm and the system they are trying to replace. “We have the same architectu­re,” says Meehan. “In the US there’s a ton of jobs dependent on oil and gas. We can help re-tool those industries. The oil trucks don’t go away. As they fade out we ramp up and use those very same people to do similar jobs, but it’s like the opposite. Fuel tankers – and tanker drivers – will still be needed to transport oil around on its way back.”

That is the dream. They have already delivered 4,000 tons of negative emissions. Their first customer was Stripe, the online payment company. But there are technical challenges every step of the way. They had their best brains working on the problem of how to get grass to flow through a hopper (ultimately coming up with a motorised system involving a lot of good vibrations). They can produce hydrogen too, but it has to be compressed – and that requires energy (and expense). It’s also not pure but it might work for industrial facilities. Bio-oil by contrast is dense and sludgy and easy to transport.

 ??  ?? C-Capture uses a solvent – cheap and readily available – that absorbs CO2, which they can siphon off and bury or sell on (CCapture)
C-Capture uses a solvent – cheap and readily available – that absorbs CO2, which they can siphon off and bury or sell on (CCapture)
 ??  ?? Both Richard Brandon (L) and Elon Musk (R) have each launched prizes worth millions of dollars for the best carbon capture company (AFP/Getty)
Both Richard Brandon (L) and Elon Musk (R) have each launched prizes worth millions of dollars for the best carbon capture company (AFP/Getty)
 ??  ?? Olivine is a naturally occurring mineral that takes up some 25 per cent on the Earth’s crust and has the wonderful property of being able to absorb CO2 (Getty/iStock)
Olivine is a naturally occurring mineral that takes up some 25 per cent on the Earth’s crust and has the wonderful property of being able to absorb CO2 (Getty/iStock)
 ??  ?? Greensand is simple and low tech, meaning everyday consumers can purchase it in its various forms for use at home (Greensand)
Greensand is simple and low tech, meaning everyday consumers can purchase it in its various forms for use at home (Greensand)
 ??  ?? Charm Industrial, meanwhile, produces ‘biooil’, which is dense and sludgy and easy to
Charm Industrial, meanwhile, produces ‘biooil’, which is dense and sludgy and easy to

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom