A small company
in the north of England has developed the “air capture” technology to create
synthetic petrol using only air and electricity.
Experts tonight
hailed the astonishing breakthrough as a potential “game-changer” in the battle
against climate change and a saviour for the world’s energy crisis.
The technology,
presented to a London engineering conference this week, removes carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere.
The “petrol from
air” technology involves taking sodium hydroxide and mixing it with carbon
dioxide before "electrolysing" the sodium carbonate that it produces
to form pure carbon dioxide.
Hydrogen is then
produced by electrolysing water vapour captured with a dehumidifier.
The company, Air Fuel Synthesis, then uses the carbon dioxide
and hydrogen to produce methanol which in turn is passed through a gasoline
fuel reactor, creating petrol.
Company
officials say they had produced five litres of petrol in less than three months
from a small refinery in Stockton-on-Tees, Teesside.
The fuel that is
produced can be used in any regular petrol tank and, if renewable energy is
used to provide the electricity it could become “completely carbon neutral”.
The £1.1m
project, in development for the past two years, is being funded by a group of
unnamed philanthropists who believe the technology could prove to be a
lucrative way of creating renewable energy.
While the
technology has the backing of Britain’s Institution of Mechanical Engineers, it
has yet to capture the interest of major oil companies.
But company
executives hope to build a large plant, which could produce more than a tonne
of petrol every day, within two years and a refinery size operation within the
next 15 years.
Tonight
Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE) officials admitted that while the
described the technology as being “too good to be true but it is true”, it
could prove to be a “game-changer” in the battle against climate change.
Stephen Tetlow,
the IMechE chief executive, hailed the breakthrough as “truly groundbreaking”.
“It has the
potential to become a great British success story, which opens up a crucial
opportunity to reduce carbon emissions,” he said.
“It also has the
potential to reduce our exposure to an increasingly volatile global energy
market.
“The potential
to provide a variety of sustainable fuels for today’s vehicles and
infrastructure is especially exciting.”
Dr Tim Fox, the
organisation's head of energy and environment, added: “Air capture technology
ultimately has the potential to become a game-changer in our quest to avoid
dangerous climate change.”
Peter Harrison,
the company’s 58 year-old chief executive, told The Daily Telegraph that
he was “excited” about the technology’s potential, which “uses renewable energy
in a slightly different way”.
“People do find
it unusual when I tell them what we are working on and realise what it means,”
said Mr Harrison, a civil engineer from Darlington, Co Durham.
“It is an
opportunity for a technology to make an impact on climate change and make an
impact on the energy crisis facing this country and the world.
"It looks
and smells like petrol but it is much cleaner and we don't have any nasty
bits."
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