
Blog - Our Journey to Negative Emissions
CDR Estimates Using Leachate Alkalinity - An Update With Improvements And One Correction
We update our document from 3 weeks ago about estimating carbon dioxide removal (CDR) by enhanced rock weathering (ERW) using measurements of alkalinity in leachate waters.
How much faster is rock weathering in our greenhouse compared to the field?
How do we “transfer” weathering rates measured in our greenhouse to the outside world?
CDR Measurement for ERW via Alkalinity in Leachate (Data From Our Greenhouse Experiment, Part 2)
In this blogpost we explain how the carbon dioxide removal (CDR) effects of weathering rock can be estimated using alkalinity measurements and what early results we see in our greenhouse experiment.
Data from the Greenhouse Experiment, Part 1: Biomass
In part one of our greenhouse data series we publish the biomass data from our greenhouse experiment (how much has biomass changed after adding rock dust to different soils?).
Carbdown Greenhouse: How We Juggle Over 4 Million Data Points Daily in Real-Time. And Why.
Why we use high frequency monitoring on a slow process and how we handle and analyze more than 4 million data points per day in real time
Turn it to *11*! The greenhouse tactics that accelerate our ERW research
While we are preparing a first look at the weathering data we have also looked at how the ambient climate in the greenhouse has developed since January. Here is an overview of this data.
Photo Diary: First 7 Months of Rock Weathering in the Carbdown Greenhouse
A photo diary of the things that happened in the greenhouse.
Quantification of ERW: Suggesting the concept of “stages” for MRV
Drawing from our experience, we hereby propose the concept of “scopes” to simplify the process. This concept is also used in the Greenhouse Gas Protocol standard to categorize greenhouse gas emissions. We'll apply this same idea to ERW.
Video: Project Carbdown: Experiences with several MRV approaches (The theory and practice of measuring ERW)
Our CEO held a conference session about our scientific work with measuring of enhanced rock weathering on croplands.
Monitoring CO₂ Concentrations in Soil Gas: A Novel MRV Approach for Cropland-Based ERW?
After more than two years of ERW experiments we still fail to measure carbon dioxide removal with traditional chemical analyses and electronic soil sensors. But when we started to monitor CO₂ concentrations in soil gas we found a signal immediately!
XXL Lysimeter Experiment: Scientific documentation of the first three months (Master Thesis)
The building process of our XXL Lysimeter project in May 2022 and the monitoring of the first 3 months was closely documented in a Master Thesis.
Diagramm: The Annual Carbon Cycle on 1 m² of Cropland - With Enhanced Weathering
A graph that shows the annual Carbon Cycle (carbon pools and carbon fluxes) for 1 m² of cropland including the Carbon Removal Effect of Enhanced Rock Weathering
Setting up the Carbdown Greenhouse Experiment 2023 (With Recipe And Shopping-list)
How we built the Carbdown Greenhouse Experiment 2023, including the reasoning of the design, our shopping list and the building recipe.
Photo-Album: What ERW Looks Like — Projects Around the World
This is how spreading 50.000 tons looks like! We have asked people from around the world that are doing enhanced weathering projects with basalt or other rocks to send us some photos and a short description of their work.
How CDR with rock weathering can be done practically and profitably (Part 1)
Our pilot project with 1217 tons of basalt demonstrates the full value chain for ERW at € 230 per ton of CO₂ (with € 100-150 in sight)
The "Cartion Park" Model for ERW on Croplands
Why do different ERW measurement approaches seem (?) to measure different amounts of CDR?
Carbon Negative/Climate Positive Cotton - A report about our initial field experiments in Greece in 2021
A guest-blog-post by Dr. Ingrid Smet introducing her detailed report on all the do’s & don’ts, lightbulb & head scratch moments, behind-the-scenes information & preliminary conclusions from the first year of spreading 6 different olivine rich rock dusts (a total of 4500 kg) to a 2 hectare cotton field in Thessaly/Greece.
Project Carbdown’s next step: We will set up a large scale greenhouse experiment with hundreds of pots
We will set up an extensive greenhouse experiment, our goal is to conduct experiments such that we can sample for all known ERW analytical approaches.
Climate Hacker's Cheat Sheet: Enhanced Rock Weathering on Croplands
Our new cheat sheet makes it possible to design early ERW pilot-projects today even without having those glitzy models of the future and before all those field tests have been done. Let’s start scaling now!