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Exxon Thinks It Can Create Biofuel from Algae at Massive Scale (fastcompany.com)
16 points by elsherbini on March 7, 2018 | hide | past | favorite | 8 comments



My main question was answered at the bottom:

> While a truck running on biofuel still emits greenhouse gases, the emissions can be considered carbon neutral since the algae sucks up CO2 as it grows–unlike fossil fuels, which burn carbon that has been buried for millions of years.


Carbon neutral might not even be enough to curb major climate change consequences like irreversible permafrost melting. [1]

We need to do much much better than that - it has to be Carbon negative - even then, it might be too late already. [2]

[1]: http://www.ipsnews.net/2011/02/permafrost-melt-soon-irrevers...

[2]: https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/SeaIce/page3.php


Well I guess we could just store up the fuel and not burn it. That would be carbon negative. Or ship it to Mars and burn it there as a start to terra forming. Too bad it's hard to get stuff to Mars.


This is the answer. Not the mars thing, but creating fuel and not burning it. We got into this mess by taking stored up CO2 and releasing it for energy. You reverse this by taking energy and released CO2 and turning it into storable "fuel".


Would planting trees do the trick?


While it would certainly help, it would solve like 0.1% of the problem. Fun fact, plants actually consume oxygen at night. On a 24 hour cycle, they create more than they consume, so everyone just thinks all they do is create oxygen.


And we already have all the empty oil wells to pump the fuel back in.

One might wonder why we took something out, only to put it back in, but ours is not to question why.


I agree, the Clathrate Gun is firing right now. So we're probably going on the Big Temperature Roller Coaster Ride anyway. So in that sense carbon neutral is probably okay in the long run if we all survive right?




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