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38 Replies

 @ISIDEWITHDiscuss this answer...11mos11MO

Yes

 @9MYJKN4disagreed…11mos11MO

Carbon capture is not effective in helping with climate change. It is expensive and uses electricity to maintain, meaning theoretically coal could be used to power carbon capture, which is only storing the emissions from the coal that was used to fuel the carbon capture. It’s pointless and promotes the idea that we don’t have to change our lifestyles to prevent further global warming.

 @ISIDEWITHDiscuss this answer...11mos11MO

No

 @9MW5DZSdisagreed…11mos11MO

The argument against carbon capture is based on current ways of capturing carbon. Technology is driven by demand and as climate change increasingly affects us, the technology will improve.

 @9PXL2XK answered…10mos10MO

Yes but within reason, it shouldn’t be just us trying funding something that would benefit the world

 @9NF7HLPanswered…11mos11MO

No, carbon capture technology can be used by some corporations as greenwashing to distract from environmental damage they're causing which is more nuanced than just CO2 emissions. Governments should subsidise practices which reduce emissions and other forms of pollution/damage rather than just offsetting them.

 @B3H865QReform UKanswered…2mos2MO

Yes, and provide subsidies to renewable energy companies, and invest in reforestation and increase spending on renewable energy, and tax carbon emissions.

 @9QFXM4Janswered…10mos10MO

CCS needs to be proven before large sums of money are invested. Focus on low carbon technologies and reducing emissions of GHG instead

 @9QFNFLNanswered…10mos10MO

Carbon capture doesn't work as of yet and often is used by companies that produce lots of fossil fuels to make it seem like they are trying to be better.

 @9QFKFRSanswered…10mos10MO

Yes, but only as a temporary measure with a cast-iron commitment from those companies to moving to purely renewable sources.

 @9Q9WWSFanswered…10mos10MO

No we should concentrate on reducing carbon emissions not undoing the damage from production of carbon dioxide

 @9Q6R8ZZanswered…10mos10MO

Yes, only provided that there is high potential to turn a profit or profitable applications in the future. when deciding the government should consider the cost of the subsidy and weather it is needed long term or short term and weigh it next to the technology potential to profit and the amout it should profit by and the technologies overall benifit to society.

 @9VJKCMHGreenanswered…7mos7MO

Carbon capture is a waste of time and is only being promoted to allow fossil fuel giants to keep doing what they're doing.

 @9QLPLZManswered…10mos10MO

No, companies should be doing that anyway and the best carbon capture is with trees, so the government should ban developments in green belt land and plant more trees everywhere.

 @9QJWJ69answered…10mos10MO

Yes, but only via the use of naturally available plants and trees that can deal with the CO2, not via 'factory-style' CO2 removers.

 @9QGT7BFanswered…10mos10MO

No, this technology won’t save us. Rewilding is a cheaper and better way to capture and store carbon, nature has done it for billions of years. Green growth doesn’t exist and carbon capture technology is just a way to force that on us.

 @9Q3ZT5Vanswered…10mos10MO

No, we need to learn redistribute natural resources and cut back on over-consumption to live in harmony with the planet

 @9Q2PZ3SGreen answered…10mos10MO

Only if those technologies were then made available to the government for free/at cost upon completion of the government funded research.

 @9PY7GLFanswered…10mos10MO

That’s what trees, plants and algae do- we need to stop deforestation and pollution of waterways and oceans

 @9P9FQNTanswered…10mos10MO

Only after it is determined that they actually work. Too much money has been given to private companies who have not produced positive results

 @9P8DZMSLabouranswered…10mos10MO

The money should be invested in preventing the release of carbon, carbon capture technology will not be viable for many decades.

 @9PZZRZDGreenanswered…10mos10MO

It seems logical to reward businesses that are trying to reverse climate change but not if it is too expensive. This isn't addressing the issue so much as putting a plaster over it.

 @9PYB3M7answered…10mos10MO

They should prove that this is what they are doing, not just SAY it's what they're doing - look at what happened during the Pandemic. Billions given to 'companies' for 'PPE' that never materialised, and most of which was never paid back. Think of the way the NHS could have used that.

 @9PQKLMYanswered…10mos10MO

Only for those technologies that drawdown emissions from the air - like direct air capture. Not for CCS used with power stations.

 @9PNQ6TCanswered…10mos10MO

I'm unsure how effective this is as a long term solution - we should focus on producing less carbon altogether.

 @9PHH7CQGreenanswered…10mos10MO

Yes, but subsidies to private companies are a comparatively ineffective way of reducing carbon emissions

 @9PGJZTTanswered…10mos10MO

Sounds like a great way forward, however what happens to the captured carbon? Just another problem for future generations?

 @9MZVWLGanswered…11mos11MO

As long as such companies actually tick all other environmental boxes. eg. do not drive unessary 4 wheel drives etc., There is not unnecessary profiteering and companies that do this are genuinely interested rather than seeing such incentives as a way of making more money.

 @9MZ55HZanswered…11mos11MO

 @9MYJK6Wanswered…11mos11MO

Carbon capture does not solve the root problem. We need to transition from a carbon economy

 @9MSWJ53answered…11mos11MO

No, we should be focusing on carbon deduction as opposed to carbon capture. Cure is better than a plaster.

 @9NZS6KBanswered…11mos11MO

Carbon capture is a small technical solution. It won't fix the issue of rising carbon. This will not work. It's greenwashijg. Subsidies for real circular and green sustainability

 @9NQMVXHanswered…11mos11MO

No, carbon capture is not economically efficient. Storing it does not help emissions, converting and utilising it is the main point

 @9NQ6N2C answered…11mos11MO

Yes, in return for share in companies, they are spending public money into a private company after all

 @9N98TWLSDPanswered…11mos11MO

No, unless a long term sustainable goal for storage of the removed CO2 is established. No point capturing it to release it back to the atmosphere.

 @9N6BNVYGreenanswered…11mos11MO

Money should go into not emitting carbon in the first place. I believe this is a temperary solution to a larger problem, it won't fix it

 @9N4H9VRanswered…11mos11MO

increase legislation on carbon emissions instead, remove the problem then there's no need for fixes.

 @9N2NCTKanswered…11mos11MO

No, carbon capture technology is avoiding the real issue of emitting carbon dioxide

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