Raggs wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 9:00 am
inactionman wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 8:50 am
Raggs wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 8:39 am
Actually really really. Taking it straight out the air. I'm sure I'd read about a Canadian company doing it, but here's a link to a UK facility that at least was planned in 2019 (date of the article)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57588248
EDIT - Reading more of the article they talk aobut the Canadian company already doing it.
They're trying it, my understanding is that it's not really there yet - whereas there are many source capture plants in operation.
I'm just glad there are many technologies/approaches in the pipeline, I'd say it's unlikely any one thing is going to do enough to dig us out the hole.
Well yes, sticking effectively one of these on an exhaust pipe is going to work better, but the tech in general is out there and proven. However source capture is only possible for large scale static producers. Which leaves all transport etc freely spewing. As it states in the article, the one they've had running as a tester, pulls about a tonne out of the atmosphere every day. Which isn't amazing, but at the same time, it's effectively a prototype.
EDIT- And getting China and the USA to stick these things on their power plants is difficult, whereas absorbing their CO2 in other countries is easier. Perhaps not "fair" but it won't just be them screwed over with their co2 emissions.
It's a promising technology but still in relative infancy, the carbon capture for exhaust stack is relatively mature.
You could imagine just setting up banks of these in relatively unproductive land and powering through solar/wind and just leaving them to it, so it's an attractive idea, although I'm not that informed about any specific fuels, catalyst or other 'ingredients' that might be required.
I'd be interested to see where the air scrubbing ultimately ends up, the engineer in me has a few doubts about ability to scale, not least as it's trying to extract relatively low concentrations of C02 (atmospheric is around 0.04% by volume) in a massive, massive catchment compared to combustion exhaust streams of around 12-14%, fuel depending, held in a single gas flow.
As you point out, the benefit is clear - it doesn't strictly depend upon goodwill of various nations and we can continue to run them once the main carbon emitters are defunct, so we're not just stopping CO2 production but actively reducing what we've already belched out there. Fingers crossed, and fingers crossed not too late.
We should also really be looking at gases like methane as well, aside from livestock farms capturing methane emissions and burning to generate power I'm well behind the curve on what we're doing about that.