• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Carbon Capture Tech Can Suck Up A Container Ship’s CO2 While It Travels

February 20, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A container ship has hit the seas fitted with an onboard carbon capture system that allows it to trap some of its carbon emissions while it makes its voyage.

The experimental pilot project was recently carried out by Seabound, a London-based climate tech startup that’s come up with an inventive way to decarbonize shipping. 

Advertisement

Their carbon capture technology was fitted on the Sounion Trader container ship during a two-month voyage from Turkey to the Persian Gulf. According to the company, the device captured 78 percent of carbon emissions and 90 percent of sulfur dioxide from one of the ship’s auxiliary engines.

“While still early days, our first pilot project proves that our technology works and that it is possible to take on this huge, complex problem,” Alisha Fredriksson, CEO and co-founder of Seabound, told The Next Web.

“This breakthrough demonstrates that the shipping industry doesn’t have to wait for new fuels or solutions to reduce its emissions in the future – we can start to capture carbon from the existing fleet right now,” explained Fredriksson. 

Off the back of this success, Seabound now aims to build a “bigger and better” system capable of removing up to 95 percent of the carbon dioxide, which they say could arrive on the market by next year.

Advertisement

The system works by hooking up a capture capture device to the engine’s exhaust. The exhaust gas is combined with calcium oxide (aka quicklime) which reacts with the carbon dioxide to produce calcium carbonate (aka limestone). The rest of the “clean” exhaust without carbon dioxide is then released into the atmosphere.

The solid limestone is then brought back to port where it can be sold as a building material. Alternatively, it’s possible to reseparate the material back into calcium oxide, which can be used for further carbon capture, and carbon dioxide, which can be sequestered underground.

There’s a lucrative gap in the market for this type of technology. Around 90 percent of traded goods are carried overseas through shipping. As the demand for international freight trade increases, the volume of goods delivered via the ocean is expected to triple by 2050.

Although indispensable to life in the 21st century, the shipping industry pumps out a massive amount of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions. Shipping vessels account for 3.1 percent of global carbon emissions per year – that’s more than the sixth biggest nation emitter, Germany. In other words, if shipping were a country, the emissions would be the sixth-biggest in the world.

Advertisement

Seabound says that the shipping industry is way behind other industries when it comes to decarbonization. However, few scientists believe that carbon capture is a silver bullet solution to climate change, despite its best intentions. 

Firstly, no amount of technology can deal with the copious streams of greenhouse gases that end up in the atmosphere. Carbon capture also attracts criticism for being expensive, difficult to scale up, and having a long history of poor performance.

Last but not least, carbon capture can be used as a justification for new fossil fuel projects – or to simply carry on with “business as usual“. It’s a bit like treating the symptoms instead of curing the actual disease.

Advertisement

Fundamentally, fossil fuels need to stay in the ground. Until that goal is reached though, perhaps carbon capture technology like this can provide a realistic means to ease the transition towards alternative energy sources.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. U.N. envoy of ousted Afghan government asks to keep New York seat
  2. These Are The Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Chemistry
  3. The Reason Why Different Cheeses Have A Smell
  4. People Want To Clean The Statue Of Liberty To Reveal Its True Color

Source Link: Carbon Capture Tech Can Suck Up A Container Ship's CO2 While It Travels

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • How Does 2-In-1 Shampoo And Conditioner Work?
  • There Are 2-Billion-Year-Old “Millennium Rocks” In A Suburb, Hundreds Of Miles From Their Primeval Home
  • “That’s A Hellfire Missile Smacking Into That UFO”: Strange Video Emerges From US UAP Hearing
  • In 40,000 Years, Voyager 1 Will Have A Close Encounter With Gliese 445
  • Abnormally Long Gamma Ray Burst Unlike Anything We’ve Seen Before Baffles Astronomers
  • Critically Endangered Shark Meat Is Being Sold In US Stores For As Little As $2.99
  • Infectious Mouth Bacteria Lurking In Artery Plaques Could Be Behind Some Heart Attacks
  • What Would You Reach If You Kept Digging Under Antarctica?
  • First Visible Time Crystals Ever Made Have Astonishing Complexity And Practical Potential
  • “Something Undeniably Special”: The Chi Cygnids, A New Five-Yearly Meteor Shower, Peak This Month
  • A 200-Meter-Tall Event We Didn’t See Sent Signals Through The Earth For Nine Whole Days
  • Why Are So Many Volcanoes Underwater?
  • In 1977, A Hybrid Was Born In A Zoo. What It Taught Us Could Save One Of The Planet’s Most Endangered Species
  • How To Park A Dangerous Asteroid So It Doesn’t Bite You Later
  • New Study Finds Evidence For What Every Parent Knows About Bluey
  • New Breakthrough Takes Plastic Garbage And Turns It Into Tool For Carbon Capture
  • NASA To Hold Press Conference About New Perseverance Rover Discovery Tomorrow
  • Strange Halos Have Formed Around Barrels Of Chemicals Dumped Off LA’s Coast Over 50 Years Ago
  • As We Grow Older, Our Music Taste Appears To Narrow To Fewer Songs
  • Stinky Seaweed Blob On Florida Beaches Thwarts Baby Sea Turtles’ Dash To The Ocean
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version