When I visit classrooms to talk about where our energy comes from, I like to bring along a decent-sized chunk of wood from my woodpile. It’s a prop I use to make a specific point about something ...
One promising solution to climate change is Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage (“CCUS”). CCUS involves capturing carbon oxides, primarily ...
With the help of a $2.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy and a small but growing network of science teachers, ...
The Environmental Projection Agency approved California’s first carbon capture and storage project in Kern County, the state’s hub for oil production and agriculture. The EPA announced in a Dec.
Swiss start-up neustark is commercializing a technology that allows facilities to store captured carbon emissions locally in structures, roads, and sidewalks.
The $16.5-billion high-profile project in question would capture harmful carbon dioxide emissions from the oilsands, Canada's ...
The company plans to annually inject about 1.5 million metric tons of carbon dioxide underground for 26 years. "This permit is authorized because the Safe Drinking Water Act allows for carbon ...
Amid local concerns about the health risks the facility could pose, an EPA official said she believes the permits are “protective of the public and the environment.” ...
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has announced three funding opportunities to develop carbon capture and transport technologies, totaling over ...
Reliant specializes in capturing CO2 emissions from power plants and industrial facilities and safely ... generating station in the area. “Carbon capture and storage opportunities represent ...
CARBON capture and storage in Gippsland has received a boost with a milestone event – the celebration of the injection of 100,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide underground by the CO2CRC at the Otway ...
Startup company Deep Sky intends to use to the funding on the world's first direct air capture carbon removal test hub and commercialization centre, which it's working on in Innisfail.