Carbon Capture And Storage
- All
- News
-
Burying Wood: A Simple, Low-Tech Carbon Storage Solution to Combat Climate Change
- Tuesday October 1, 2024
- Written by Gadgets 360 Staff
Researchers have found a 3,775-year-old log buried under a farm in Canada, offering insight into a low-cost and scalable method to lock carbon out of the atmosphere for millennia. The study reveals that burying wood under the right conditions, such as in oxygen-deprived environments and clay soils, could prevent its decay and preserve its carbon co...
- www.gadgets360.com
-
Forests Emit Carbon Dioxide for Years After Wildfires, Study Finds
- Friday August 16, 2024
- Written by Gadgets 360 Staff
A recent study has found that forests destroyed by wildfires continue to emit carbon dioxide (CO₂) for years after the flames die down. The research, conducted in Sweden’s boreal forests, revealed that burnt areas release CO₂ at a rate that more than doubles the amount emitted during the fire itself. These findings are particularly concerning...
- www.gadgets360.com
-
Sugar Found In Ocean Bed Equivalent to "32 Billion Cans Of Coke": Study
- Tuesday May 24, 2022
- World News | Edited by Raag Mathur Ramdev
Seagrass meadows are extremely efficient at capturing carbon, and are one of the worlds top carbon capturing ecosystems.
- www.ndtv.com
-
US Launches $3.5 Billion Programme to Capture and Store CO2 From Air in an Effort to Minimise Climate Change
- Friday May 20, 2022
- Reuters
The US Energy Department has launched a programme on Thursday to fund four large-scale projects across the country that can remove carbon dioxide from the air. The federal department invested $3.5 billion in the technology. The programme would create four regional direct air capture hubs to spur the widespread deployment of the technology and carbo...
- www.gadgets360.com
-
How Burying CO2 Under The Sea Can Help The Climate Change Fight
- Monday July 9, 2018
- World News | Eric Roston, Bloomberg
A Cold War-era joke has an American economist asking a Soviet peer how the communist economy is progressing. "In a word: good," the Russian responds. "In two words: not good."
- www.ndtv.com
-
Burying Wood: A Simple, Low-Tech Carbon Storage Solution to Combat Climate Change
- Tuesday October 1, 2024
- Written by Gadgets 360 Staff
Researchers have found a 3,775-year-old log buried under a farm in Canada, offering insight into a low-cost and scalable method to lock carbon out of the atmosphere for millennia. The study reveals that burying wood under the right conditions, such as in oxygen-deprived environments and clay soils, could prevent its decay and preserve its carbon co...
- www.gadgets360.com
-
Forests Emit Carbon Dioxide for Years After Wildfires, Study Finds
- Friday August 16, 2024
- Written by Gadgets 360 Staff
A recent study has found that forests destroyed by wildfires continue to emit carbon dioxide (CO₂) for years after the flames die down. The research, conducted in Sweden’s boreal forests, revealed that burnt areas release CO₂ at a rate that more than doubles the amount emitted during the fire itself. These findings are particularly concerning...
- www.gadgets360.com
-
Sugar Found In Ocean Bed Equivalent to "32 Billion Cans Of Coke": Study
- Tuesday May 24, 2022
- World News | Edited by Raag Mathur Ramdev
Seagrass meadows are extremely efficient at capturing carbon, and are one of the worlds top carbon capturing ecosystems.
- www.ndtv.com
-
US Launches $3.5 Billion Programme to Capture and Store CO2 From Air in an Effort to Minimise Climate Change
- Friday May 20, 2022
- Reuters
The US Energy Department has launched a programme on Thursday to fund four large-scale projects across the country that can remove carbon dioxide from the air. The federal department invested $3.5 billion in the technology. The programme would create four regional direct air capture hubs to spur the widespread deployment of the technology and carbo...
- www.gadgets360.com
-
How Burying CO2 Under The Sea Can Help The Climate Change Fight
- Monday July 9, 2018
- World News | Eric Roston, Bloomberg
A Cold War-era joke has an American economist asking a Soviet peer how the communist economy is progressing. "In a word: good," the Russian responds. "In two words: not good."
- www.ndtv.com