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.