• Home
  • GreenWorld
  • Asia
  • Australasia
  • Canada
  • Europe
  • Global
  • India
  • Top Stories
  • UK
  • USA

Currently with 3,181 posts and more than 10 new posts added each day!


Carbon Offsets Daily

The Best Resource On All Things Carbon

Ramgen, Maker of CO2 Compression Technology, Aims to Fight Climate Change

Posted in USA on July 7, 2009

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to our or .

| Sourced From |

Forget renewable fuels for a minute. If the world is ever going to get serious about avoiding a global warming catastrophe, then we need to capture carbon dioxide being spewed from power plants into the atmosphere and bury it underground, at least according to one school of thought. The technology to make this practical on a grand scale doesn’t exist, but Ramgen Power Systems, a small company in Bellevue, WA, full of aerospace engineers, says it has learned some things from jet engines that could turn this vision into reality.

Ramgen arrived on my radar in May, when it secured $20 million in federal stimulus money for its carbon compression technology. U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu cited the company as a leader in the effort to make coal-fired power plants cleaner for the environment. This technology is complicated stuff, and the implications are potentially profound, so I visited Ramgen CEO Doug Jewett at his office last week to learn about it in greater depth.

The problem Ramgen is facing is so big, it needs to first be placed in proper context. To avoid melting of polar ice caps that would flood many highly-populated coastal areas around the world, the U.S. and the world needs to cut its carbon emissions 80 percent by 2050, from baseline readings in 1990, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Where to cut? That’s hard to say. Most of the energy Americans use goes to four primary sectors—generating electricity, transportation, industry, and residential and commercial use. So to reduce carbon emissions, people could switch to electric cars, buses, trucks, and electric heating and cooling in homes and offices, Jewett says. That means there’s going to be a lot more demand for electricity. And where does that come from? More than half of the nation’s electricity, and the leading source of air pollution, comes from the same source—coal. That isn’t likely to change anytime soon, Jewett says, so the real question is how to continue burning coal and natural gas to meet demand for electricity, without causing an environmental disaster.

“Most of what people are talking about with renewable involves incremental decreases in carbon emissions,” Jewett says. “Carbon capture and storage is key if we’re going to be effective at reducing greenhouse gas emissions.”

“It’s very troubling,” he says.

OK, so how does Ramgen fit into this picture? The company was founded …Next Page »

Luke Timmerman is the National Biotechnology Editor for Xconomy. You can e-mail him at [email protected], call 206-624-2374, or follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/ldtimmerman.

What’s Next?

  • Leave a comment

Related Posts

  • Carbon credits for forest landowners becoming increasingly important
  • US carbon bill a boon for world offsets market
  • Farmer face potential pain, gains in new “carbon economy”
  • What is The Ki?
  • UPS to cut airplane fleet’s carbon output

{ 0 comments… add one now }

Leave a Comment

You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

  • Recent Comments

    • Don Pratt on EU carbon prices slip below 13 euros a tonne
    • on Carbon Trading Set to Triple by 2012
    • Alicia Bourmor on New Earthscan Book Shows Carbon Markets Are Set to Treble in Size over the Next 3 Years
    • on UN climate chief: Rich nations short on CO2 goals
    • on Carbon-tax “protectionism” to start global trade war?
  • Learn

    Sharing global CO2 emission reductions among one billion high emitters
    EcoSecurities, Conservation International (CI), ClimateBiz and the Climate, Community and Biodiversity Alliance (CCBA) findings of their recent ‘Forest Carbon Offsetting Trends’ survey 2009.
    EcoSecurities and ClimateBiz findings of the carbon offsetting trends survey 2008.
  • Webinars

    Successfully Navigating the Carbon Offsetting Standards Maze Part I -hosted by EcoSecurities and 2 Degrees, with guest speakers from CCAR, Environmental Defense Fund, Gold Standard and the Voluntary Carbon Standard.

    Successfully Navigating the Carbon Offsetting Standards Maze’ Webinar - Part II - hosted by EcoSecurities and 2degrees, with guest speakers from CCAR, Environmental Defense Fund, Gold Standard and the Voluntary Carbon Standard.

    Forest Carbon Offsetting Survey 2009 – International findings

    Forest Carbon Offsetting Survey 2009 – North American findings


  • VER Statistics *NEW!

    Source: APX; CCX; CAR; TZ1

    29th June - 5th July 2009

    APX GS Registry: 106 (+2) Projects Listed

    APX VCS 36 (+2) Projects with Issued VCUs

    CCX CFI weekly volume 316,600Mt (-365,400Mt)

    Climate Action Reserve 46 Projects Listed (9 Issued)

    TZ1 VER Registry 41 VCS (+3) Public View Projects

    From MF Global Weekly CDM & VER Market Summary

  • CDM Statistics *NEW!

    Source: UNFCCC

    29th June - 5th July 2009

    Total Issued CERs: 310.6Mt Issuances: 1155

    Total CERs Requested: 3.92Mt Host countries: 55

    Registered Projects: 1704 Requests: 52

    From MF Global Weekly CDM & VER Market Summary

  • Companies & CO2

    brands

    +

    carbon offsets

    who uses them?

  • Pages

    • About
      • Advertising
    • Brands and Carbon Offsets
    • Calculate Your Emissions
    • Carbon Emissions Management Software
    • Carbon Neutral Products
    • Carbon Offset Certifications
    • Carbon Offset Retailers
    • Events & Conferences
    • Glossary
    • GreenWorld
    • How to Buy a Carbon Offset
    • The Sustainable Blogosphere & Web
    • Tools For Business
    • What Is RSS?
    • _Customizations To This Blog
  • DAILY NEWS


     
    What is RSS?

    Or, subscribe via email:

    Or, follow on Twitter:

  • Data / Rankings / Research

  • Exchanges

  • GHG Validation and Verification

  • Interviews

    • All Interviews
  • News & Market Insight

  • Project Developer

  • Web Apps

  • Paid News Services






Get smart with the from DIY Themes.