TechCrunch News 04月23日 19:06
Xprize Carbon awarded to a dirt simple carbon removal technology
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Mati Carbon凭借其增强岩石风化技术赢得了Xprize碳移除竞赛的5000万美元大奖。该技术通过将岩石粉末撒在农田上,加速二氧化碳转化为稳定矿物质,从而将碳封存在土壤中数千年。Mati Carbon使用玄武岩,一种常见的火山岩,并免费为农民提供服务,成本主要来自补助金和碳移除信用销售。该公司预计到2030年代初,碳移除信用价格将低于每吨100美元。这项技术不仅有助于减少碳排放,还能提高农田生产力,改善土壤保水性,并为全球范围内的农民带来经济效益,特别是发展中国家的小农户。

🌱 Mati Carbon 赢得了Xprize碳移除竞赛的5000万美元大奖,其技术为增强岩石风化。

⛏️ 增强岩石风化技术涉及将岩石粉末(如玄武岩)撒在农田上,加速二氧化碳转化为稳定矿物质,从而将碳封存在土壤中。

🌍 Mati Carbon免费为农民提供服务,资金来源包括补助金和碳移除信用销售,预计到2030年代初,碳移除信用价格将低于每吨100美元。

🌾 该技术不仅能减少碳排放,还能提高农田生产力,改善土壤保水性。例如,在赞比亚,使用该技术的农田产量比未使用的农田高。

🤝 Mati Carbon计划向其他组织提供免费的企业资源规划(ERP)平台许可,条件是这些组织承诺至少将50%的利润分享给他们服务的农民,旨在惠及全球范围内的农民,尤其是在发展中国家。

Sometimes the simpler idea is the winner.

That’s certainly the case with the winner of the Xprize Carbon Removal competition, which was announced on Wednesday. Mati Carbon walked away with the $50 million grand prize for its enhanced rock weathering program that locks carbon in soils for thousands of years.

The Musk Foundation underwrote the prize. The runners up were NetZero, which produces biochar; Vaulted Deep, which processes and buries waste biomass; and Undo Carbon, another enhanced rock weathering startup. Mati also beat finalists that spanned a range of technologies, from direct air capture to ocean alkalinity enhancement.

“It’s really been a honor to be selected amongst the luminaries of carbon removal who have been competing for this prize,” Shantanu Agarwal, founder and CEO of Mati Carbon, told TechCrunch.

Mati’s carbon removal technology, enhanced rock weathering, is simple. The company grinds up rocks that naturally convert carbon dioxide into stable minerals, increasing their surface area to help them absorb carbon more quickly. Then the rock dust is spread on farm fields where mineralize carbon and contribute micronutrients to the soil.

Several different types of rocks work for enhanced rock weathering, but Mati uses basalt, a volcanic rock that’s available in a number of regions around the globe. There, fine particles are often waste from aggregate used in construction. 

Logistics are key to making enhanced rock weathering work for carbon removal. Mati applies basalt to the farmers fields free of charge. Costs are supported by a mix of grants and carbon removal credit sales. The company expects to deliver about 5,000 to 6,000 metric tons of carbon removal credits this year.

Agarwal said that Mati is aiming to sell credits for less than $100 per metric ton by the early 2030s. Longer term, he anticipates the price will drop to $70 to $80 per metric ton. To validate the credits, the company takes eight samples for every three acres of farmland. As its database grows and its models improve in accuracy, Mati expects it’ll need far fewer samples. 

Around 200 million smallholder farmers could benefit from adding basalt to their fields, Agarwal said. Altogether, those small farms, generally less than 24 acres, support about 1 billion people.

“It’s about 800 million to 900 million acres of farmland,” he said. “You deploy that into carbon removal, you get more than a gigaton of removal every year while increasing income of these farmers who are extremely poor.”

After a season, farmers typically get 25% more productivity from soils that are fertilized and 50% to 70% in soils that are degraded, Agarwal said. The soil amendment also improves water retention. 

“This material is the difference between having a crop and having no crop. We’ve seen that in Zambia this year. There were farmers who put this in half of the field — and half of the field was like normal — and there was no crop normal half because everything died because there was a drought.”

To reach all those farmers, Agarwal admits that Mati is unlikely to grow quickly enough. So Mati is planning to give free licenses to its enterprise resource planning (EPR) platform to organizations provided those organizations pledge to share at least 50% of any profits with the farmers they serve.

In addition to Zambia, Mati also operates in India and Tanzania. The company plans to add three more countries this year, eventually expanding to encompass much of the Global South, Agarwal said, a term that refers to developing countries.

Like many other climate tech startups, Mati is registered as a public benefit company. But unlike many others, the company is controlled by the Swahili Initiative, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. 

“I want to build a market mechanism and scale a nonprofit to global scale, which allows for large portion of the value to accrue the farmer,” Agarwal said. “This Xprize is going to go a long way to push us in that direction.”

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Mati Carbon 碳移除 增强岩石风化 农业
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