Will burying biomass underground curb climate change?
On April 11, a small company called Graphyte began pumping out beige bricks, somewhat the consistency of particle board, from its new plant in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. The bricks donβt look like much, but they come with a lofty goal: to help stop climate change.
Graphyte, a startup backed by billionaire Bill Gatesβ Breakthrough Energy Ventures, will bury its bricks deep underground, trapping carbon there. The company bills it as the largest carbon dioxide removal project in the world.
Scientists have long warned of the dire threat posed by global warming. Itβs gotten so bad though that the long-sought mitigation, cutting carbon dioxide emissions from every sector of the economy, might not be enough of a fix. To stave off the worstβincluding large swaths of the Earth exposed to severe heat waves, water scarcity, and crop failuresβsome experts say there is a deep need to remove previously emitted carbon, too. And that can be done anywhere on Earthβeven in places not known for climate-friendly policies, like Arkansas.