These days, many experts are saying that we’re not going to be able to stop climate change just by decreasing emissions. To dig our way out of this hole, they say, we’re actually going to need to take carbon dioxide out of the air.
The first instinct has been to bury the CO2. Just pump it into the Earth and try and forget how ashamed we are of these massive quantities of CO2. But a new breed of entrepreneur has sprung up, saying "If we have this CO2, why don't we do something useful with it!?"
Obviously, we've got to get rid of all that carbon, but if folks can make some money and lower the cost of sequestration while they're doing it...then that's just icing on the cake. So here are five of the ways in which people are hoping to make bank with the millions of tons of CO2 that are pumped out of coal plants and into the atmosphere every day.
Feed it to Algae, and then Turn the Algae to Fuel
You may know that biofuels can be made from algae. You may also know that algae thrives on carbon dioxide. A company called GreenFuel Technologies has put two and two together, and is using captured CO2 to grow algae, which will then be made into biofuels. But they aren't the only ones working on it. There are dozens of startups working to create different techniques and algal strains that will allow them to maximize carbon capture and minimize costs. Earth2Tech recently had a writeup on 15 of the top algae biofuel startups. Of all of the techniques listed hear, algae farming with CO2 is probably the most mature technology, and the first fuel-producing plants are already going online. And, of course, we don't have to worry about ever running out of a market for biofuels. As long as we're creating CO2 by burning fuels, there will be a place to burn biofuels.
Turn it into Plastic
Recently the American Chemical Society saw a proposal to use captured CO2 to produce polycarbonate plastics, like those used in CDs and DVDs. The idea is to take carbon dioxide emissions, and instead of sequestering them in the ground, trap them in resilient products. This approach makes sense, but because it relies largely on sequestering carbon in disposable products, like plastic forks and water bottles. So, basically, we'd be sequestering carbon every time we threw away plastic. Landfill sequestration seems like a pretty wasteful way to go to me, but it's certainly better than the alternative. But even with the amount of disposable plastic we consume in the world, we would have plenty of CO2 left over if all of it was turned to plastic.
Make Sodium Bicarbonate (Baking Soda)
Joe David Jones, CEO of Skyonic, has created a process that captures CO2 as it exits power plant smokestacks and mixes it with sodium hydroxide to form baking soda. This process, called SkyMine, also removes heavy metals and dangerous pollutants and coverts the CO2 into sodium bicarbonate. Baking soda has a variety of uses on the commercial market, and this process could help make carbon capture more economically viable. Even if the baking soda is not sold, because it is solid it is immensely easier to store it in old mines or landfills than it would be to sequester gaseous CO2 beneath the ground. The real question is whether the world can produce enough sodium hydroxide to keep the process going.
Calcium Carbonate
A company called Carbon Sciences has a new process called GreenCarbon, which, at the base of things, turns carbon dioxide into useful stuff. The GreenCarbon process mixes the CO2 with crushed calcium minerals, one of the most abundant elements in the earth's crust. The end result is calcium carbonate, an industrial chemical that's used in thousands of applications, from PVC to paper to toothpaste and, in its pure form, as wall board and chalk. Because calcium carbonate is used in just about everything, there’s a huge market for it, and depending on the quality, it can sell for hundreds of dollars a ton. The question remains, though...is there enough of a market? The CEO of Carbon sciences says yes, but we're skeptical as a single coal plant could produce millions of tons of calcium carbonate per year.
Convert it Directly into Fuel
Sandia National Laboratories is working on creating fuel directly from CO2 without any pesky biological intermediaries like aglae. The carbon dioxide would be super heated to around 1,200 C and mixed with water to create various hydrocarbons of the sort we're already burning in our cars. All of that heat, of course, is energetically expensive, but Sandia is hoping to use leftover heat from nuclear or utility-scale solar thermal power generating plants. The process basically reverses combustion, and is only economically viable if the energy can come from cheap, clean sources. The good news is that it can be scaled much more easily than algae production, which requires thousands of acres of space to soak up the CO2 from one coal plant.
In Conclusion
There's no one solution to this problem. We'll probably start out pumping most of it underground, while turning a good portion of it into fuel. But I expect that, in the next 20 years, power producers start having to pay the true costs of releasing CO2, techniques for creating useful products with that CO2 will multiply. Depending on where coal plants are and what resources they have around them, project planners will have to figure out what the most economically viable thing to do with the CO2 is. If there's a lot of calcium deposits around, they'll be creating calcium carbonate, but if there's a lot of sun and ample space, maybe algae farms will pop up around the power plant.
In any case, we'll see an entire economy spring up around actually using our societies primary waste product. And not only is that just good policy, it's a gigantic economic opportunity.

written by Magnus H., April 21, 2008
written by Alejandro, April 21, 2008
The same problem is present in converting CO2 into plastics, baking soda and calcium carbonate, as carbon is a relatively inert chemical to my knowledge. At the very least, we will need to take into account the energy that goes into production of the other chemical reactants. We'll need to plan carefully where all this energy comes from and whether the extra heat energy from power plants will be enough... Until then, my bets are on algae :-)
written by Greg Hoke, April 21, 2008
Here is the link to the youtube video with Craig Venter's TED talks.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKZ-GjSaqgo
written by Andrew, April 21, 2008
written by jake3988, April 21, 2008
====================
Carbon is known for its ability to form bonds with just about everything.
What we're doing is simply making carbon dioxide reusable. Nothing in any of these methods will the CO2 actually be taken out of the atmosphere.
We need to store it. What's the best way? TREES!! :)
Replant our forests.
written by Adrian, April 21, 2008
I am trying to find easy, simple things I can do to help stop global warming (I don’t plan on buying a hybrid). Has anyone seen that www.EarthLab.com is promoting their Earth Day (month) challenge, with the goal to get 1 million people to take their carbon footprint test in April? I took the test, it was easy and only took me about 2 minutes and I am planning on lowering my score with some of their tips.
I am looking for more easy fun stuff to do. If you know of any other sites worth my time let me know.
written by Kate, April 22, 2008
written by isaac Segura, April 22, 2008
So we are left with baking soda and algae.
written by CMDC, April 22, 2008
written by CMDC, April 22, 2008
written by Kent Ragen, April 22, 2008
Kent
www.ecounit.com
written by Cris, April 22, 2008
written by Ken, April 23, 2008
I agree with other posters that renewable energy should be our first priority. However, we are somewhat kidding ourselves if we think that this will solve our problems completely. All options need to be on the table to solve the global warming problem in the most economical and sustainable fashion.
written by TRaK, April 23, 2008
written by Frebird, April 24, 2008
written by Alejandro, April 24, 2008
written by Sridhar.Iyer, April 27, 2008
How about using sprinklers in the air whcih would react with CO2 & possibly reduce CO2.
How about desalinating the sea water ( this has a cost attached) and pumping across the arid lands across the globe . this would retake out the additional water from the sea ( sea level rising could be avioded/reduced). this also adds to the water level on the ground and ensures that these lands could be utilised for culitvation whcih would again reduce the CO2 plus address the food crisis.
Dear learned professors/ scientists please share with me if this would work
written by Darrin, April 29, 2008
written by Stevegong, April 29, 2008
Turn it into Plastic: I don't know how much CO2 could a folk contain. who can tell me? Thanks.
Make Sodium Bicarbonate: are these sodium hydroxide free of energy consumption?
Calcium Carbonate: In my knowledge, most of the Calcium on earth is already present in the form of Calcium Carbonate.
Turn it into fuel: this will cost energy and if the energy is from coal power plants, it will produce more CO2 than it can reduced, because there will always be an efficiency less than 100%.
written by Olaf Schuiling, April 29, 2008
Trees? Nice idea, but when I see those forest fires, I always think "was that the tree that you bought to offset your CO2-debt?"
written by frisbee, May 02, 2008
If not it’s only a short in between solution and will not answer the problem. It will just postpone it a little.
As far as I understand none of the options stated can contribute. Anyone Who Can Prove Me Wrong Here? Please do so!
written by Marian, August 29, 2008
written by David, September 14, 2008
This would remove a bunch of carbon dioxide, and put it in the form of a carbon sink. Each step is technologically feasible, but there's no money in it. You'd be taking a valuable product and putting it back in the earth, so while it's a cool idea on paper, it will never happen.
written by steven, October 03, 2008
written by Ric Ashton, March 18, 2009
The origin of life is plant based. It supplied us with enough oxygen to evolve.
Is it possible to generate an equilibrium for the seas to sequestrate a maintainable and sustainable acidic level with the correct balance of gases in the atmosphere which allow us life?
Or is this playing God?
written by West Lake, April 10, 2009
written by Annynomus, September 16, 2009
How have you not thought of it yet!!!!!! there are a few options:
1. We could in the mars mission take CO2 there to heat it up so that it could support plants to make oxygen ultimately meaning we could LIVE on mars!!!!
2. Sattileites could use it to boost them into final orbit
3. We could abandon it in space
4. We have space stations in space solely turning CO2 into O2
You make think these ideas will not do much, but if we use them all as well as other ideas and everyone saving power, a few hundred coal mines switch to eco, And it would really help if more people got solar panels which not only support the house but means the coal mines may have to close if to many people have them and they share execcs power. Lots of people are already planning on buying a electric or a hybrid when they get rid of theres. The Dealers could do there part by saying return your old non-eco car to us and we'll give you a discount on a new eco one!
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