
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A technology that can slow or stop climate change already exists — and has a history of bipartisan support in Washington. But it has a few hoops to jump through before it can make a bigger impact.
The method is called carbon capture, which removes carbon from the atmosphere and stores it deep underground.
“You can think of this whole process as essentially putting carbon back where it came from,” said Ben Grove, senior manager for carbon storage with the nonprofit Clean Air Task Force.
“Geologic storage has been occurring since the 1970s, mostly in the oil and gas industry, but to date, we’ve stored over a billion tons of Co2 in deep geologic formations.”
There’s significant storage potential in the U.S. — but challenges in infrastructure and storage permits may stand in the way of progress.
“We’re thinking [carbon capture] needs to be scaled up to the gigaton scales,” Grove said. “But this could grow up to a very large industry — like billions of tons [of carbon capture].”
To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
By Minnesota Public Radio4.7
8484 ratings
A technology that can slow or stop climate change already exists — and has a history of bipartisan support in Washington. But it has a few hoops to jump through before it can make a bigger impact.
The method is called carbon capture, which removes carbon from the atmosphere and stores it deep underground.
“You can think of this whole process as essentially putting carbon back where it came from,” said Ben Grove, senior manager for carbon storage with the nonprofit Clean Air Task Force.
“Geologic storage has been occurring since the 1970s, mostly in the oil and gas industry, but to date, we’ve stored over a billion tons of Co2 in deep geologic formations.”
There’s significant storage potential in the U.S. — but challenges in infrastructure and storage permits may stand in the way of progress.
“We’re thinking [carbon capture] needs to be scaled up to the gigaton scales,” Grove said. “But this could grow up to a very large industry — like billions of tons [of carbon capture].”
To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.

91,002 Listeners

43,855 Listeners

25,827 Listeners

8,762 Listeners

9,191 Listeners

466 Listeners

573 Listeners

181 Listeners

1,225 Listeners

204 Listeners

565 Listeners

247 Listeners

12,196 Listeners

6,398 Listeners

79 Listeners

216 Listeners

41 Listeners

1,092 Listeners

2,306 Listeners

127 Listeners

16,322 Listeners

6,547 Listeners

177 Listeners