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Researchers are exploring how to pair geothermal with oil and gas sites and use captured carbon dioxide as a feedstock for ...
It's been another record-breaking year for carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fossil fuels, European researchers reported in a new study released early Tuesday in Dubai.
This year’s total carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels are projected to reach 36.8 billion tonnes by the end of 2023 – another all-time high. The finding, from the annual Global Carbon ...
Finally, some good news in the battle against greenhouse gasses: Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from the burning of fossil fuels are on track to rise less than 1% this year.
In 2014 alone, burning fossil fuels and creating cement released about 9.9 billion tons of carbon dioxide. This level was an all-time high. Read more: Under Trump, fewer Republicans think global ...
In context: Global carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels are increasing every decade, with current levels said to be significantly higher than what they were at the end of the ...
Researchers from NOAA and the University of Colorado have devised a breakthrough method for estimating national emissions of carbon dioxide from fossil fuels using ambient air samples and a well-known ...
In the scrublands of central Kenya, technicians monitor four large metallic tanks where steam heated by the Earth's crust is ...
The Global Carbon Project estimates that worldwide carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels will rise 1.1% this year over 2022, to 36.8 billion metric tons, a new peak.
Microsoft struck a deal with 1PointFive last year for 500,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide removal. And Amazon agreed to pay for 250,000 metric tons of carbon removal from 1PointFive’s first ...
We know roughly how much more carbon dioxide we can put into the atmosphere before we exceed our climate goals—limiting warming to 1.5° to 2° C above preindustrial temperatures.
The amount of methane that comes from burning fossil fuels is much higher than previously thought – as much as 40% higher, a new study suggests. And the amount from natural sources is far lower.