+28 28 0
Published 7 years ago by Jourdy288 with 11 Comments

Join the Discussion

  • Auto Tier
  • All
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
Post Comment
Conversation 10 comments by 5 users
  • kxh (edited 7 years ago)
    +4

    And ... then what do you do with all the CO2 you've made?

    • NinjaKlaus
      +4

      It's in the article....

      The container then closes, and the process reverses. The collector is heated to 100 degrees Celsius (212 degrees Fahrenheit), and the pure CO2 is released in a form that can be buried underground, made into other products, or sold.

      • kxh
        +3

        I did read it, but ... who wants to buy CO2? Burying it doesn't really work. What can you make CO2 into?

        • AdelleChattre
          +3

          I used to have an office just opposite of the Henry Weinhard's brewery. They bought CO2 by the tankful. Dry ice for refrigeration? Sparkling beverages? Fire extinguishers? Energy? Spooky fog effects?

          • kxh
            +3

            So you make CO2, extracting it out of the atmosphere with your fancy new machine and then sell it to people who put it back. Makes sense. I wonder if this way of making CO2 is cheaper than the fractionation process they use to extract Nitrogen, CO2 and oxygen and other gasses from the atmosphere?

            • AdelleChattre
              +2

              There has been some progress at sequestering carbon by using it in fracking wastewater injection but there are secrets and then there are proprietary fracking fluid ingredient secrets. Last I heard, nth hand, it was promising but not profitable.

            • kxh
              +3
              @AdelleChattre -

              The last I read on carbon sequestration, it was only viable economically if they were forcing the CO2 underground to pump up oil or gas and it wasn't clear that the CO2 was staying down there anyway.

            • AdelleChattre
              +3
              @kxh -

              Okay, how about you warehouse the carbon and run a long con where you sell it as carbon offsets in a cap-and-trade market about a thousand times?

            • Appaloosa
              +3
              @AdelleChattre -

              Soros and Goldman Sachs would be happy to do just that all in the name of saving the planet.

    • tranxene
      +4

      Sell it

  • NinjaKlaus
    +4

    I don't know the cost of this thing but every city that has several dilapidated old shopping centres should consider knocking them down and putting in a couple of these, it may not offset much, as that's not talked about in the article, but it would be something. The big bonus here is that it would create some jobs as well due to the needed maintenance of these things. The creator's website has some interesting information but I don't know if they lie like most companies looking to sell something.

Here are some other snaps you may like...