Energies (Feb 2022)

CO<sub>2</sub> Capture by Virgin Ivy Plants Growing Up on the External Covers of Houses as a Rapid Complementary Route to Achieve Global GHG Reduction Targets

  • Jaroslaw Krzywanski,
  • Waqar Muhammad Ashraf,
  • Tomasz Czakiert,
  • Marcin Sosnowski,
  • Karolina Grabowska,
  • Anna Zylka,
  • Anna Kulakowska,
  • Dorian Skrobek,
  • Sandra Mistal,
  • Yunfei Gao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/en15051683
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 5
p. 1683

Abstract

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Global CO2 concentration level in the air is unprecedently high and should be rapidly and significantly reduced to avoid a global climate catastrophe. The work indicates the possibility of quickly lowering the impact of changes that have already happened and those we know will happen, especially in terms of the CO2 emitted and stored in the atmosphere, by implanting a virgin ivy plant on the available area of walls and roofs of the houses. The proposed concept of reducing CO2 from the atmosphere is one of the technologies with significant potential for implementation entirely and successfully. For the first time, we showed that the proposed concept allows over 3.5 billion tons of CO2 to be captured annually directly from the atmosphere, which makes even up 6.9% of global greenhouse gas emissions. The value constitutes enough high CO2 reduction to consider the concept as one of the applicable technologies allowing to decelerate global warming. Additional advantages of the presented concept are its global nature, it allows for the reduction of CO2 from all emission sources, regardless of its type and location on earth, and the fact that it will simultaneously lower the air temperature, contribute to oxygen production, and reduce dust in the environment.

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