Suckin’ It Up: Capturing Carbon from the Atmosphere

20 Mar, 2012

by Marc Gunther, via Grist.org

CO2 emissionWhat if, in addi­tion to curb­ing green­house gas emis­sions, we could cap­ture them from the air? That’s the ques­tion that prompted Marc Gunther, an author and con­tribut­ing edi­tor at Fortune mag­a­zine, to write the e-book Suck It Up, a Kindle Single. Below is an excerpt from the book on the his­tory of the start-up Kilimanjaro Energy, a pri­vate com­pany that is seek­ing to solve the car­bon extrac­tion equation.

Working at the Los Alamos National Laboratory dur­ing the 1990s, Klaus Lackner had numer­ous inter­ests: the behav­ior of high explo­sives, nuclear fusion, and self-replicating machine sys­tems. At some point, he turned his atten­tion to the tech­nol­ogy used to cap­ture CO2 from the smoke­stacks of coal plants—technology in which the U.S. gov­ern­ment has invested bil­lions of dol­lars, with lit­tle to show for it. He began to won­der whether it might make more sense to scrub CO2 from the atmos­phere. So when his daugh­ter Claire asked for help with a sci­ence project, he asked her: “Why don’t you pull CO2 out of the air?”

Chemical engi­neers have known for decades that sodium hydrox­ide, a caus­tic base also known as lye, will bind with CO2, an acid, to make car­bon­ates. That’s basi­cally how CO2 is removed from the air so peo­ple can con­tinue to breathe on sub­marines or in space­ships. Claire accom­plished the feat by fill­ing a test tube with a solu­tion of sodium hydrox­ide, buy­ing a fish-tank pump from a pet store, and run­ning air through the test tube all night. By the next day, some of the sodium hydrox­ide had absorbed CO2, cre­at­ing a solu­tion of sodium carbonate.

I was sur­prised that she pulled this off as well as she did,” Lackner recalls, “which made me feel that it could be eas­ier than I thought.”

Duly inspired, Lackner set off on a quest to design a machine to pull CO2 out of the air. This would seem to be much harder than col­lect­ing car­bon diox­ide from the smoke­stacks of power plants that burn coal or nat­ural gas, where con­cen­tra­tions of CO2 are about 12 per­cent (for coal) or 4 per­cent (for nat­ural gas). Less than 0.04 per­cent of the air is CO2. Still, in a pre­sen­ta­tion called “Carbon Dioxide Extraction From Air: Is It An Option?” that he wrote in 1999 with Hans-Joachim Ziock, a col­league at Los Alamos, and the late Patrick Grimes, an expert in chem­i­cal processes, Lackner iden­ti­fied an impor­tant role for air-capture technology:

While it may be cost-advantageous to col­lect the car­bon diox­ide at con­cen­trated sources with­out ever let­ting it enter the atmos­phere, this approach is not avail­able for the many dif­fuse sources of car­bon diox­ide. Similarly, for many older plants a retro­fit to col­lect the car­bon diox­ide is either impos­si­ble or pro­hib­i­tively expen­sive. For these cases we inves­ti­gate the pos­si­bil­ity of col­lect­ing the car­bon diox­ide directly from the atmos­phere. We con­clude that there are no fun­da­men­tal obsta­cles to this approach and that it deserves fur­ther investigation.

This remains key to the appeal of air cap­ture: Because green­house gases are dis­persed around the globe, they can be extracted from the air anywhere. 

Carbon diox­ide spew­ing from a tailpipe in Sao Paulo or a coal plant in China can be cap­tured by a machine in Iceland or the Middle East, because the atmos­phere func­tions as a con­veyor belt, mov­ing CO2 from its sources to any sink. That’s impor­tant, because while we can envi­sion a world where most or all of the elec­tric­ity we use comes from nuclear, solar, or wind energy, or from fos­sil fuels where the CO2 is cap­tured at the power plant, it’s harder to see how emis­sions from cars, trucks, trains, ships, and planes can be eliminated.

The beauty of air cap­ture, Lackner and his col­leagues explained, is that “one could col­lect CO2 after the fact and from any source … One would not have to wait for the phas­ing out of exist­ing infra­struc­ture before address­ing the green­house gas prob­lem.” Air cap­ture plants, they wrote, could be located atop the best under­ground reser­voirs for stor­ing CO2, which may be in iso­lated loca­tions. This fact is key to the busi­ness plans of all the air-capture start-ups. In only one regard was Lackner’s paper clearly mistaken—he esti­mated that the cost of air cap­ture would be “on the order of $10 to $15 per ton,” a tar­get that now looks wildly optimistic.

Click here to read the rest of this arti­cle at Grist.org.

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