-
Two children found dead in car as France faces hottest day of heatwave
-
US suspends Iran oil sanctions, says nuclear inspectors to return
-
Two children die in France as heatwave blasts Europe
-
Stokes and Atkinson cleared by Cricket Regulator after nightclub incident
-
Ex-Wimbledon champion Vondrousova banned four years for refusing drugs test
-
Veteran Le Roy named new coach of Congo
-
Milan-Cortina chief Malago elected new head of Italian FA
-
Germany's Schlotterbeck out of World Cup with ankle injury
-
Any unfreezing of Iranian funds will not finance terrorism: Vance
-
Vance hails 'good foundation' for Iran deal after direct talks
-
Alan Greenspan: longtime Fed chief with a divided legacy
-
Leinster boss Cullen to step down at end of next season
-
'Has-been' Belgium stars scorched after Iran World Cup draw
-
Oil falls on US-Iran progress; pound holds up as Starmer resigns
-
Starmer resigns as UK PM, Burnham favourite to take over
-
France, Germany reach deal on arms maker KNDS, paving way for IPO
-
Latest developments on Europe's heatwave
-
France set for hottest day yet of heatwave
-
Keir Starmer: downfall of UK's unpopular PM
-
Gaza's surfers seek solace in the sea
-
MEXC Lists Arcium (ARX) with 70,000 USDT in Airdrop+ Rewards
-
EasyJet rejects £5 bn takeover offer from US equity firm
-
Europe scorched by latest heatwave
-
Mediators hail 'progress' in US-Iran talks after lengthy opening session
-
UK's Starmer resigns as prime minister
-
Coffee break: Starbucks Korea stores pause for training after 'Tank Day' fiasco
-
Rightist leaders congratulate Colombian president-elect
-
Rare Philippine school shooting kills three teens, wounds seven
-
Kenya labour minister accused over Russian forced recruitment
-
Crude prices drop after 'positive' US-Iran talks
-
Some France schools closed for day of searing heat
-
Tuchel's England face defensive questions despite flying start at World Cup
-
Frankfurt to All Blacks: New Zealand pick first German-born player
-
Not just a hideout: Sahel forests provide base for jihadists
-
Ageless Messi has World Cup scoring record in his sights
-
Africa faces child surgery crisis as key anaesthesia runs out
-
Trump-backed populist wins razor-tight Colombia vote, sparking protests
-
J-Bay: S.Africa's surf mecca missing out on the global tour
-
'Progress', say mediators, after Iran-US talks towards ending war
-
Key points from the first round of Iran-US talks
-
European countries close schools, cancel trains as heatwave set to intensify
-
Crude prices drop, most stocks rise on 'positive' US-Iran talks
-
'Progress', say mediators, after Iran-US talks on ending war
-
Slimy beans: Japanese natto disgusts and delights the world
-
Clark wins despite hecklers but hopes not to be 'heel of the PGA'
-
Cape Verde targeting World Cup knockout rounds after Uruguay draw: coach
-
Father's Day near-miss at US Open brings Burns to tears
-
New coach Rennie names Savea as All Blacks captain
-
Scheffler praises Clark's resolve in gutsy US Open triumph
-
Yamal kickstarts Spain World Cup bid as Cape Verde stun Uruguay
Billionaires promote CO2-removing schemes to protect climate
The boss of NetZero still can't believe his start-up has won a million-dollar prize from Elon Musk to improve ways of sucking climate-heating carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air.
"That'll fund a year of R&D (research and development)... or two-thirds of a factory," Axel Reinaud told AFP.
The XPrize Carbon Removal competition, set up by the billionaire Tesla boss, is a response to the scary conclusion reached by the world's top climate scientists.
However quickly the world slashes man-made greenhouse gas emissions, it will still need to extract CO2 from the air and oceans to avoid climate catastrophe, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said in April.
Today, CO2 removal is a necessary weapon in the battle to stop global heating accelerating beyond a point of no return.
Technology to do so exists but remains prohibitively expensive. It also needs to be ramped up significantly to make a dent in the 40 billion tonnes of CO2 the world emits each year.
So private-sector giants are stepping in to kick-start research, as they did with vaccines and the first aeroplanes.
The $100-million (93-million-euro) XPrize initiative is a bid to foster low-cost solutions for sucking up huge quantities of CO2 every year and stocking it for ever.
The top prize will be announced in 2025.
NetZero has already scooped up one of the 15 early-stage awards for an astute economic model.
It burns farm waste, which contains CO2, and turns it into "biochar", a kind of "carbon dust" used to enrich the soil.
The heat generated by burning is captured to generate renewable electricity, which is sold to the grid.
In all, NetZero says it can remove a tonne of CO2 for just a few dozen dollars.
In North America, companies like Alphabet, Meta, McKinsey, Shopify and Stripe have agreed to invest $925 million in fostering carbon removal schemes between now and 2030.
The First Movers Coalition, an alliance of some 50 firms from sectors where emissions are hard to reduce such as aviation, shipping and cement, has also committed to financing carbon removal technology.
- Tried and tested method -
Today, research on removing carbon from the atmosphere is conspicuous by its near-absence.
The process is "extremely difficult to manage", French science historian Amy Dahan told AFP. "Musk's idea is to give this field of research a higher profile," she explained.
This is a tried and tested method.
In the 1920s the Orteig prize, which promised $25,000 to the first aviator to fly non-stop from New York to Paris, spurred developments that changed the history of aviation.
More recently, Microsoft founder Bill Gates's promise of finance has done much to accelerate vaccine research since 2010.
But the $100 million for R&D into carbon capture and storage "is in another league altogether", Dahan said.
The US-based Climate Foundation has also received a significant boost from the XPrize.
It uses seaweed to absorb carbon from surface ocean waters. When the algae decompose, they sink to the ocean depths, taking the trapped carbon with them.
The prize money will help it grow its first hectare of seaweed platform, founder Brian Von Herzen told AFP.
He is conscious, though, that such philanthropic incentives are a drop in the ocean.
"Such prizes, including carbon purchases made by Stripe and Microsoft, are important but insufficient first steps to building out a robust carbon removal ecosystem," he said.
"We have to start scaling up these solutions right now. In fact, we're already late," NetZero's Reinaud added.
"We should have started 20 years ago. We're behind on all climate issues."
- A drop in the ocean -
The vital goal is to remove billions of tonnes of CO2 every year -- before 2050 -- to prevent the average temperature of the planet rising more than 1.5 degrees Celsius.
This is critical to avoid large and irreversible changes to the climate.
At present, the world is only removing "microscopic" quantities of CO2, Reinaud said.
Instead, we need to build "something as huge as the oil industry in just 30 years", which requires investments equivalent to "several percentage points of GDP" rather than the current "peanuts".
Dahan agreed. Billionaires would do better to stop greenwashing and change their carbon-spewing business models, she said.
"Of course, we need them to take part in this effort," she said, but what we really need are binding government policies and international agreements.
Despite the $3.5 billion the US government has pledged to invest in carbon removal, "governments aren't grabbing this problem by the horns", she said.
E.Schubert--BTB