No.
Better than nothing.
If we have to overbuild green energy to get a reliable supply, use the excess on things like this.
It’s also has a directly measurable output (…input?) - I would prefer that money was spent on this rather than carbon offsetting, which is basically a scam.
Considering all of the car still on the road gas furnaces and stoves still in houses that need to be replaced all of the other pesky smaller sources of carbon emissions going to zero is going to be a pain in the ass, the last 10 or 20% being the most annoying of all so you’re going to need something. Meanwhile we’re already throwing away solar and wind power in excess of what we can do anything with, and we could easily end up with cheap enough solar that for about 8 hours a day there’s literally unlimited free energy you could dump into something like this
We could stop cutting down the fucking rainforest and start planting trees since that’s already engineered by nature.
We could also stop digging up oil from the ground and burning it. Novel idea I know.
Fully grown trees are carbon neutral. Yeah trees are made of carbon and when growing they pull carbon from the air and turn it into wood. Once fully grown that’s it.
We should use more wood for construction, that way we clear more land for growing new trees with the wood essentially storing carbon in the structure of a building.
But the impact of that won’t be much. We should do it because every little bit counts, but it would only be a minor part of a much larger solution.
We could also stop digging up oil from the ground and burning it. Novel idea I know.
Yup. That’s the crux of the problem. We’re pulling chemicals from the ground and burning it. Were do the gases from that go? Nowhere. They just stay in the atmosphere.
Biochar – Use highly efficient biochar retort machines to turn clean biomass waste into carbon that will last thousands of years and use it as an amazing soil amendment.
Betteridge’s law of headlines is an adage that states: “Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no.”
Probably not
not really, but passive carbon capture (no fans) can help to make things like lubricant oil by cutting the drilling process.
These are not engineering issues but political ones. We could have potentially unlimited supply of food even with current technology but here we are
Pretty much yeah. Also an economic issue as well, but politics can direct the economy in the right direction.
We already have all the technology needed to solve global warming.
The capitalist class would really, really like to think so, because it would not only give them an excuse not to clean up their act, but also turn into a profit-making opportunity for them to charge us for the fix.
I’m always thinking it as an energy problem. Using up energy to suck up carbon isn’t 100% efficient, and tech to suck up oil isn’t either. So trying to undo the damages of the latter, we produce even more CO2 (building those and also running those ( even just by supplying remote areas with stuff)) and then use up valuable energy, so we can just go on ignoring that we’re burning up a limited resource without much efficiency to start with.
Maybe, but we sure won’t
I mean, probably, but those that make enough money to do so have no interest in doing it because it doesn’t make a profit.
It’s more that the kind of engineering proposals they have aren’t going to really solve the problem
Yes but only if there is the political will to
Perhaps, if we’re lucky and we also move quickly to reduce (not financially ‘offset’) new pollution
Algae production is the solution, whether human greed will allow it to solve the problem is debatable.
The real question is, can we change the financial incentives so that killing the climate isn’t the most profitable short term strategy?