The Department of Energy announced in early October the termination of billions of dollars in federal funds to energy projects, including a grant to Northwestern’s Trienens Institute for ...
REYKJAVIK, ICELAND - MAY 24: A bank of fans draws air through specialized filters at Climeworks' Mammoth carbon removal plant on May 24, 2024 in Reykjavik, Iceland. Considered the largest direct-air ...
Like new fuels and onboard carbon capture, direct air capture (DAC) needs to be scaled up to become an effective decarbonization pathway. This week, German shipowner NSB Group demonstrated its ...
At least tens of millions of dollars are on the line for big carbon removal projects in Louisiana and Texas. The US Department of Energy appears poised to terminate funding for a pair of large ...
The Trump administration has canceled awards for nearly half of the 21 federally supported megaprojects that seek to pull carbon dioxide from the atmosphere — a major setback for a direct air capture ...
Startups developing direct air projects will need to look beyond traditional financing models to scale the technology, according to the president of Occidental Petroleum Corp.’s carbon removal unit.
Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha (NYK) has purchased carbon dioxide removal credits that will be enabled by 1PointFive’s Direct Air Capture (DAC) technology. This marks NYK’s second purchase of credits ...
Occidental Petroleum's (NYSE:OXY) first direct air capture hub is on track to begin capturing carbon dioxide later this year, CEO Vicki Hollub said Thursday, according to UpstreamOnline.com. Two ...
Taking carbon out of the atmosphere is essential for slowing global warming—and a team of Cornell University researchers has estimated "huge" potential for carbon capture using a method that is ...
Series A funding to accelerate deployment of modular DAC systems delivering cost-effective, on-site CO₂ for food, beverage, manufacturing, and agriculture—offering a path to large-scale sequestration ...
In September 2023, a mysterious seismic signal rocked the scientific community—and, on a more literal level, the world. For nine days straight, seismic anomalies appeared every 90 seconds; a month ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results