News

Climate technology company Heirloom has opened the first commercial Direct Air Capture plant in the US, which will sequester atmospheric carbon for permanent storage using energy-efficient kilns.
The world has plenty of limestone. And plenty of excess carbon dioxide, thanks to us. A startup called Heirloom uses limestone to capture carbon dioxide, then permanently and safely stores it.
A host of carbon-capture startups hope to reverse this trend by removing large amounts of CO 2 from the atmosphere. One of those startups, Heirloom Carbon, announced on Wednesday that it had ...
The plant in Tracy, built by Silicon Valley startup Heirloom Carbon Technologies, puts California at the forefront of the emerging carbon removal industry as a handful of so-called direct air ...
SHREVEPORT, La. – Heirloom Carbon Technologies, Inc. announced it is moving forward with the first phase of a decarbonization project that combines public and private investment to create two ...
Nov 9 (Reuters) - California climate technology company Heirloom on Thursday unveiled what it says is the first U.S. commercial direct air capture (DAC) plant to suck planet-warming carbon dioxide ...
Microsoft is helping to fund one of the US’s first hubs for pulling planet-heating carbon dioxide out of the air. It struck a deal with California-based startup Heirloom, which says it will ...
SHREVEPORT, La. (KSLA) - Heirloom Carbon Technologies announced they will be investing $475 million to establish north America’s second direct air capture facility in Louisiana. America is ...
The start-up that built the facility, Heirloom Carbon Technologies, calls it the first commercial plant in the United States to use direct air capture, which involves vacuuming greenhouse gases ...
Noah McQueen will serve as director of science and innovation at Carbon180. The co-founder of a leading direct air capture startup has joined a carbon removal advocacy group. Noah McQueen, who ...