Carbon Engineering is moving ahead with its carbon removal service business, allowing customers to buy the removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere using its direct air capture technology. The ...
An aerial view of Carbon Engineering's operational research facility in Squamish, British Columbia. How wonderful it was to live at the turn of the twenty-first century! We had the luxury of ...
A plant from Carbon Engineering and 1PointFive—which spun out of oil company Occidental—will suck 1 million tons of CO2 out of the atmosphere every year. It’s just the beginning of their carbon ...
Carbon Engineering is a Canadian company that specializes in the development of direct air capture (DAC) technology. The company's DAC technology captures carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere ...
Two commercial-scale direct-air carbon removal demonstration hubs on the Gulf Coast—set to be the largest in the world—could split about $1.1 billion in federal funding for development, the U.S.
Integration of Occidental’s operations experience and Carbon Engineering’s technology improves cost and capital efficiencies, and enables Occidental to catalyze broader partnerships for DAC deployment ...
A large plant that captures carbon from the air could help create an industry the world needs to avoid dangerous levels of warming this century. Climeworks, Carbon Engineering, Carbon Collect Now In ...
OCCIDENTAL, AN American oil major, recently agreed to buy Carbon Engineering, a Canadian carbon-removal company, for $1.6bn. The deal underlines big oil’s growing interest in carbon-capture ...
David Pogue is a six-time Emmy winner for his stories on "CBS Sunday Morning," where he's been a correspondent since 2002. Pogue hosts the CBS News podcast "Unsung Science." He's also a New York Times ...
The occasion: the formal unveiling of the world’s biggest machine for sucking carbon out of the air. The geothermally powered contraption represented a rare hopeful development in our climatically ...
Chitin-derived carbon aerogel prevents leakage in phase change materials, boosting durable and sustainable heat storage.
Steve Oldham has had a pretty good past few weeks. He runs a company called Carbon Engineering, which plans to build huge machines to suck carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and store it underground ...