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Carbon sequestration company plans plant in Lee's Summit

Carbon sequestration company plans plant in Lee's Summit

A company that plans to remove carbon from the air and sequester it underground announced it will open a plant in Lee’s Summit to produce a key piece of its technology.

Spiritus will open a facility in Lee’s Summit it’s calling Garden One, the company said in a Thursday release. The plant will make “fruit,” or materials that can absorb carbon from the air and later release it so that the greenhouse gas can be stored underground.

The New Mexico company announced in March plans to establish its first “Carbon Orchard” in central Wyoming, which it claims will be one of the world’s largest direct-air carbon capture facilities, capable of taking as much as two megatons of carbon from the atmosphere each year. The carbon will be sequestered in a geologic formation at the site.

There is great interest in carbon sequestration by industries seeking to reduce their carbon footprints. Spiritus claims its system can remove carbon for less than $100 a ton, or roughly a tenth of the cost of some other technologies.

The company claims it already has interest from companies including Frontier, a company whose founders include Stripe, Alphabet and Meta.

The Lee’s Summit plant will occupy 37,500 square feet at 2237 NE Town Centre Boulevard, near the Lee’s Summit Municipal Airport.

Spiritus said in a release that work at the facility began this summer in anticipation for the first production runs this fall. Company officials anticipate the plant will create 30 jobs in the next three years.

The company said it chose Lee’s Summit because of its central location along major transportation systems that will let it receive materials and, eventually, ship product nationwide. The release also mentioned “competitive economic incentives” as a draw to Lee’s Summit, but no details were disclosed.

The Lee’s Summit plant will produce a central piece of the Spiritus system. It will produce essentially balls of material that will be placed in open-air arrays, called “trees,” in Spiritus “orchards.” The modular system allows Spiritus to scale up by adding more trees.

After the fruit has soaked up carbon, it is sent through a centralized system that removes the carbon from the fruit. The carbon is sequestered deep underground while the fruit it returned to the orchard to repeat the cycle.

Plans for Orchard One call for it to annually remove the equivalent of airline emissions from 3 million people or 340,000 pickup trucks.

In a release, Spiritus said the fruit is designed to be made from materials that are easily obtainable in every global region.

Spiritus’ investors include Khosla Ventures, a California venture capital firm founded by Vinod Khosla, a founder of Daisy Systems and Sun Microsystems. Spiritus said lists as founding partners Watershed, Cloverly and Terraset — platforms for companies wanting to purchase carbon offset credits.

Rewind.earth
Biomass carbon removal and storage
|
Tel Aviv, Israel
|
R&D
Rewind.earth uses cranes off of boats to sink agricultural and forest residues to the oxygenless bottom of the Black Sea, the largest anoxic body of water on Earth. Oxygenless water dramatically slows biomass decomposition. The lack of living organisms in the Black Sea limits any potential ecosystem risks. This process allows for affordable and environmentally safe carbon removal.
Carboniferous
Biomass carbon removal and storage
|
Houston, TX, US
|
R&D
Carboniferous sinks bundles of leftover sugarcane fiber and corn stover into deep, salty, oxygenless basins in the Gulf of Mexico. The lack of oxygen in these environments–and therefore absence of animals and most microbes–slows the breakdown of biomass so it is efficiently preserved and stored durably in ocean sediments. The team will conduct experiments to determine the functional stability of sunken biomass as well as the interaction with ocean biogeochemistry.
Vycarb
Ocean alkalinity enhancement
|
Brooklyn, NY, US
|
58 tons
Vycarb uses a reactor to add limestone alkalinity to coastal ocean water, resulting in the drawdown and storage of atmospheric CO₂. Their dissolution system has a novel sensing apparatus that base tests water, dissolves calcium carbonate, and doses alkalinity into the water at a controlled amount safe for dispersion. Their closed system makes it easier to measure the amount of dissolved alkalinity added and CO₂ removed.
Arbon
Direct air capture
|
New York, NY, US
|
173 tons
Arbon uses a 'humidity-swing' process to capture CO₂ from the air. The sorbent binds CO₂ when dry and releases it when wet. This process uses less energy than approaches that rely on changing temperature and pressure to release CO₂. The sorbent’s ability to bind CO₂ has been shown to remain stable over thousands of cycles. Both of these innovations could reduce the cost of DAC.
Vaulted
Biomass carbon removal and storage
|
Houston, TX, US
|
1,666 tons
Vaulted injects organic waste into durable wells, where the carbon in the waste is sequestered as it decomposes. Using a specialized slurry injection technology, their process can handle a wide range of organic carbon sources with minimal energy and upfront processing. Their system has the potential to be deployed quickly at large scales.
Spiritus
Direct air capture
|
Los Alamos, NM
|
713 tons
Spiritus uses a sorbent made from commercially-available materials and a passive air contactor that requires little energy to capture CO₂. The CO₂-saturated sorbent is then regenerated using a novel desorption process, capturing the CO₂ and allowing the sorbent to be reused with less energy than a higher-heat vacuum chamber typically used in direct air capture approaches. The high-performance, inexpensive sorbent and lower regeneration energy provide a path to low cost.
Planetary
Ocean alkalinity enhancement
|
Nova Scotia, Canada
|
937 tons
Planetary harnesses the ocean for scalable removal. They introduce alkaline materials to existing ocean outfalls like wastewater plants and power station cooling loops. This speeds up the sequestration of CO₂ safely and permanently as bicarbonate ions in the ocean. Planetary then verifies the removal through advanced measurement and modeling techniques.
Mati
Enhanced weathering
|
US and India
|
1,513 tons
Mati applies silicate rock powders to agricultural fields, starting with rice paddy farms in India. These rocks react with water and CO₂ to produce dissolved inorganic carbon that is subsequently stored in the local watershed and eventually in the ocean. Mati relies on rice field flooding and higher subtropical temperatures to accelerate weathering, and extensive sampling and soil and river modeling to measure removal and deliver co-benefits to smallholder farmers.
Holocene
Direct air capture
|
Knoxville, TN, US
|
332 tons
Holocene captures CO₂ from air using organic molecules that can be produced at low cost. In the first step of their process, CO₂ is captured from air when it comes into contact with a liquid solution. In the second step, a chemical reaction crystallizes the material as a solid. That solid is heated up to release the CO₂, minimizing energy wasted in heating water. Holocene’s process runs at lower temperatures, further reducing the energy required, increasing energy flexibility, and lowering overall cost.
EDAC Labs
Enhanced weathering
|
Baltimore, MD, US
|
317 tons
EDAC Labs uses an electrochemical process to produce acid and base. The acid is used to start the recovery of valuable metals from mining waste, and the base is used to capture CO₂ from air. The acid and base streams are then combined to produce metals that can be sold for applications such as batteries, and solid carbonates, which permanently store CO₂.
CarbonRun
Ocean alkalinity enhancement
|
Nova Scotia, CA
|
1,291 tons
CarbonRun enhances the natural ability of river currents to weather abundant, low-cost limestone and reduce river acidity levels. This benefits river ecosystems locally and enhances the rivers’ ability to capture CO₂ from the atmosphere. Rivers, which are natural carbon transport systems, then deliver CO₂ to the ocean for permanent storage in the form of bicarbonate.
CarbonBlue
Direct ocean removal
|
Haifa, Israel
|
400 tons
CarbonBlue uses calcium in a closed-loop cycle to mineralize, separate, and remove dissolved CO₂ from water. This results in a pure stream of CO₂ that can be durably sequestered. Their approach can operate in freshwater or saltwater and can rely on waste heat for the regeneration process. The team plans to integrate with desalination plants and other water-withdrawing industries, reducing energy usage and costs.
Carbon Atlantis
Direct air capture
|
Munich, Germany
|
275 tons
Carbon Atlantis is using a process known as electrochemical pH-swing. Their system uses a solvent to capture CO₂ and an acid to release it. This approach is inspired by recent innovation in Proton Exchange Membrane fuel cells and electrolyzers, making the process both cost-effective and energy-efficient. The CO₂ is then run through
Banyu Carbon
Direct ocean removal
|
Seattle, WA, US
|
360 tons
Banyu Carbon uses sunlight to capture CO₂ from seawater. A reusable, light-activated molecule that becomes acidic when exposed to light causes carbon dissolved in seawater to degas as CO₂, which is then stored permanently. Because only a small portion of the visible light spectrum is needed to trigger the reaction, this is a highly energy-efficient approach to direct ocean removal.
Alkali Earth
Enhanced weathering
|
Northfield, MN, US
|
1,351 tons
Alkali Earth uses alkaline byproducts from industrial processes as carbon-removing gravel to apply to roads. These minerals act as a sink for atmospheric CO₂, storing it permanently while cementing road surfaces. The formation of CO₂-containing minerals within the gravel can be directly measured, leading to high-confidence in resulting removals.
Airhive
Direct air capture
|
London, UK
|
943 tons
Airhive is building a geochemical direct air capture system using a sorbent that can be made out of cheap and abundant minerals. This sorbent reacts rapidly with atmospheric CO₂ when mixed with air in Airhive’s fluidized bed reactor. Coupled with a regeneration process that’s powered by electricity to release the CO₂ for geologic storage, this provides a promising approach to low-cost DAC.