Made-from-CO2 concrete, lululemons and diamonds spark investor
excitement
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[October 04, 2021] By
Jane Lanhee Lee and Nia Williams
(Reuters) - What do diamonds, sunglasses,
high-end lululemon sportswear and concrete have to do with climate
change?
They can all be made using carbon dioxide (CO2), locking up the planet
warming gas. And tech startups behind these transformations are grabbing
investor attention.
Some use bacteria. Some use proteins. Some use chemical processes to
speed natural reactions. Most pull apart the carbon and the oxygen in
CO2 to create another chemical that is used to make consumers goods.
Companies in the area raised over $800 million so far this year, more
than tripling from 2020, according to a Reuters review of data from
PitchBook, Circular Carbon Network, Cleantech Group and Climate Tech VC.
(Graphic: Carbon Tech Investments:
https://graphics.reuters.com/
CARBONTECH-RECYCLEDCO2/FUNDING/
jnvweybdrvw/
chart.png)
"I don't want to call it a green tax, but our consumers who really do
care
have demonstrated that they're willing to pay a bit of a
premium," said Ryan Shearman, chief executive of Aether Diamonds, which
grows diamonds in the lab using captured CO2.On the opposite end of the
glamour spectrum, the concrete industry, green also is good for
marketing, said Robert Niven, CEO of CarbonCure Technologies, which
makes technology that injects CO2 into fresh concrete, and strengthens
it by locking in the carbon.
"About 90% of our uptake has been from independent concrete producers
large and small that are just looking for that competitive edge."
The world needs to capture and store 10 billion tonnes of CO2 annually
by midcentury to slow climate change, according to United Nations
estimates, a scale the companies can only dream of, when current carbon
capture pilots often are at scales of hundreds and thousands of tonnes.
Humans produce greenhouse gases that are the equivalent of around 50
billion tonnes of CO2 each year, and governments will gather in Scotland
in late October and November for a U.N. climate conference on cutting
emissions.
All fossil-based products that could use recycled CO2 instead account
for some 6.8 billion tonnes of emissions, according to a Columbia
University report in May
https://energypolicy.columbia.edu/sites/
default/
files/file-uploads/CO2-Recycling_CGEP_Report_043021.pdf, although lead
author Amar Bhardwaj said trying to swap out all of that "would be a
misuse of CO2 recycling," since there are cheaper ways to reduce carbon
emissions.
[to top of second column] |
A worker sets an Aether diamond made from captured CO2 into a ring
at the RFG Manufacturing Riviera jewelry design facility in
Manhattan in New York City, New York, U.S., September 30, 2021.
Picture taken September 30, 2021. REUTERS Mike Segar
Nicholas Flanders, co-founder of Twelve, which uses chemical processes to reuse
CO2, says recycling is better than storing captured CO2 underground. "We're
developing a technology that can go toe to toe with fossil fuels" without
additional financial incentives to remove carbon.
That is because many consumers are attracted by "green" labels.
lululemon athletica inc says it has created a polyester yarn from carbon
emissions with LanzaTech that will be used for future products. LanzaTech, which
has raised the most funds of companies in the space, according to Reuters'
review, creates ethanol using bacteria. Ethanol is turned into ethylene which is
used to make everything from plastic bottles to polyester.
CEO Jennifer Holmgren said LanzaTech's ethanol is more expensive than corn based
ethanol, but customers looking to source greener products are buying.
The biggest investment in the space this year, more than $350 million, was into
Houston-based Solugen, which feeds CO2 and other ingredients to enzymes that
make chemicals for stronger cement, water pipe coating and other products.
Its products are already cheaper than those made from fossil fuels, said CEO
Gaurab Chakrabarti. Still, it is not sourcing CO2 captured from factory
emissions or from the air, which Chakrabarti described as an option.
Capturing CO2 is a less enticing prospect for many investors, who think the
government should fund such expensive, high risk projects.
However, Nicholas Moore Eisenberger, managing partner at Pure Energy Partners,
has invested in direct air capture firm Global Thermostat and sees opportunity
in necessity and believes once the projects scale up, they will be cheaper.
"The science tells us that we have under a decade to start to bend the curve on
climate, and that is now within the investment time frame of most venture and
private equity investors," said Eisenberger.
(Reporting By Jane Lanhee Lee and Nia Williams; editing by Peter Henderson and
Marguerita Choy)
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