OSLO (Reuters) - Many nations want a draft U.N. report to tone down prospects for sucking greenhouse gases from the air to help fix global warming, reckoning the technologies are risky, documents seen ...
Direct air capture (DAC) holds promise to extract carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, potentially becoming a crucial tool in the battle against climate change. Amidst heated debates over its ...
Irish startup Silicate is poised to launch its first U.S. trial of advanced carbon removal techniques. The Sligo-headquartered firm asserts it possesses state-of-the-art technology capable of ...
This month elites from 198 nations gathered in the fossil-fuel-rich United Arab Emirates for the 28th annual Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Agreement on Climate Change. Near ...
Answering this question requires some context. Extracting carbon dioxide from the air, a concept called direct air capture (DAC), is no longer an unusual idea but an emerging sector poised for rapid ...
At a major climate meeting in Poland, nearly 200 countries are trying to reach a deal on dramatically reducing carbon emissions. But a recent U.N. report found that may not be enough to avoid ...
OSLO, April 4 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Extracting carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by planting forests and developing controversial high-tech industries will be essential to meet global goals ...
The world’s largest facility for extracting carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere is up and running in Iceland, more than quadrupling the world’s total capacity for direct air capture (DAC).
Elected officials convened just outside of California’s Bay Area Thursday to celebrate the launch of the first commercial direct air capture facility in the United States. Though the facility hasn’t ...