Friday, September 05, 2025

 

Scientists transform plastic waste into efficient CO2 capture materials



From waste to valuable resource: Chemists at the University of Copenhagen have developed a method to convert plastic waste into a climate solution for efficient and sustainable CO2 capture, thereby addressing not one, but two major global challenges




University of Copenhagen

Baeta 

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“The beauty of this method is that we solve a problem without creating a new one. By turning waste into a raw material that can actively reduce greenhouse gases, we make an environmental issue part of the solution to the climate crisis,” says Margarita Poderyte from the Department of Chemistry at the University of Copenhagen, lead author of the research paper.

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Credit: Photo: Max Emil Madsen, University of Copenhagen.




As CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere keep rising regardless of years of political intentions to limit emissions, the world’s oceans are drowning in plastics, which threatens marine environments and ecosystems.

The key global problems are often interconnected, and typically, the solution to one problem creates another one while the clock keeps ticking. But what if we could solve several problems at the same time?

It’s almost too good to be true, but a new cutting-edge invention promises to do just that. Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have developed a method where one man’s trash really does become another man’s “treasure”, when decomposed PET plastic becomes the main ingredient in efficient and sustainable CO2 capture.

We know the material from plastic bottles, textiles, and many other uses: PET plastic is one of the most widely used types of plastic in the world, but when it has served its purpose, it becomes a pressing global environmental issue. This is because it ends up in landfills in many parts of the world, where it breaks down into polluting microplastics that spread to the air, soil and groundwater. A large portion also end up in the oceans.

“The beauty of this method is that we solve a problem without creating a new one. By turning waste into a raw material that can actively reduce greenhouse gases, we make an environmental issue part of the solution to the climate crisis,” says Margarita Poderyte from the Department of Chemistry at the University of Copenhagen, lead author of the research paper disclosing the invention.

The solution is a potential win-win on a global scale, where plastic waste not only does not end up in nature but also becomes an active player in climate mitigation.

With the new chemical technology, researchers can transform PET plastic waste that is overlooked by recyclers into a primary resource in a new form of CO2 sorbent they have developed. The process ‘upcycles’ it to a new material the researchers have named BAETA, which can absorb CO2 out of the atmosphere so efficiently that it easily compares with existing carbon capture technologies.

Sustainable, flexible and scalable

The BAETA material has a powdery structure that can be pelletized, and a chemically ‘upgraded’ surface, which enables it to very effectively bind and chemically capture CO2. Once saturated, CO2 can be released through a heating process allowing the CO2 to be concentrated, collected and stored or converted into a sustainable resource. In practice, the researchers expect the technology to be first installed on industrial plants with exhausts from chimneys passing through BAETA units to cleanse them of CO2.

The research paper is now published in Sciences Advances and describes the chemical process behind the invention. The process is gentle compared to existing technologies and, at the same time, well-suited for industrial scaling.

“The main ingredient is plastic waste that would otherwise have an unsustainable afterlife, and the synthesis we use, where the chemical transformation takes place, is gentler than other materials for CO2 capture because we can make the synthesis in ambient temperatures. It also has the advantage that the technology can be scaled up more easily,” Margarita Poderyte says.

She is seconded by co-author and Associate Professor at the Department of Chemistry, Jiwoong Lee, who highlights the material’s flexibility also.

“One of the impressive things about this material is that it stays effective for a long time. And flexible. It works efficiently from normal room temperature up to about 150 degrees Celsius, making it very useful. With this kind of tolerance to high temperatures, the material can be used at the end of industrial plants where the exhausts are typically hot,” Jiwoong Lee says.

From laboratory to innovation at the end of the chimney

With a potentially revolutionary idea, a proven method and an effective finished product, the researchers are now ready for the next step.

“We see great potential for this material, not just in the lab, but in real-life industrial carbon capture plants. The next big step is scaling up to produce the material in tonnes, and we’re already working to attract investments and make our invention a financially sustainable business venture,” Margaryte Poderyte says.

The technical challenges do not worry the researchers. Instead, the decisive challenge, they say, is to persuade decision-makers to make the necessary investments. If they succeed in that, the invention could ultimately lead to significant changes.

A sea of cheap plastic

Large amounts of PET plastic accumulate in our oceans, damaging ecosystems and breaking down into microplastics, the consequences of which are yet unknown. That sort of plastic is very well suited for the technology.

“If we can get our hands on the highly decomposed PET plastic floating in the world’s oceans, it will be a valuable resource for us as it’s so well suited for upcycling with our method,” Margarita Poderyte says.

The researchers hope that their invention can help to fundamentally change the way we see climate and environmental issues as separate problems.

“We’re not talking about stand-alone issues, nor will the solutions be. Our material can create a very concrete economic incentive to cleanse the oceans of plastic,” Jiwoong Lee says.
 

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Facts: How CO2 capture works

Measured in weight, PET plastic constitutes over 60 percent of carbon, and the material has an inherent chemical and physical ability to maintain the structure.

This ability is enhanced by transforming the plastic by adding a quantity of ethylenediamine, a compound known for its ability to bind CO2.

The process breaks down the plastic from polymer to a monomer, giving the material a chemical composition that is very effective in pulling CO2 out of the air and binding it.

The material is called BAETA.

In industrial plants, the idea is to transmit the exhaust through BETA units, which will cleanse it of CO2. When the BAETA material is saturated, its efficiency decreases; however, CO2 can be released from the plastic through a heating process, restoring its efficiency.

The carbon released can then be stored underground or used in Power2X plants via CO2 utilization.


More info: No conflict with recycling

During the development process, the researchers encountered concerns that their technology could undermine efforts to recycle plastic, which has been heavily invested in. Fortunately, that is not the case, they say.

“In principle, we could use new plastic for our method, but our target is PET plastic that is difficult to recycle because of low quality, coloration or mixed sources – or that has decomposed to such a degree that it’s no longer suitable for recycling. So, this will be a collaboration rather than competition with the efforts to recycle plastic,” Margarita Poderyte says.

 

About the study:

This project is supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation CO2 Research Center in collaboration with the group of Niels Christian Nielsen, Aarhus University.

The following researchers have contributed to the research article:

Margarita Poderyte
Ji-Woong Lee
Arianna Lanza
Rodrigo Lima

Dennis Wilkens Juhl
Kathrine L. Olesen
Niels Chr. Nielsen

 

Discovery of North America’s role in Asia’s monsoons offers new insights into climate change




University of Bristol
Discovery of North America’s role in Asia’s monsoons offers new insights into climate change 

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  1. Mechanism Schematic of North American teleconnection to Asian summer monsoon. North American continent creates a heating center in summer. This then creates atmospheric ripple effects, which strengthens North Pacific subtropical high-pressure system and widens the north Hadley cell. This enhanced anticyclone pushes stronger westward flows toward Asia, exciting deeper convection, brings more moisture from the ocean, and thus intensifies rainfall over East and South Asia.
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Credit: Linlin Chen





The study, published today (5 September) in the journal Science Advances, indicates how the heating in North America can trigger remote effects in Asia – this could be further exacerbated by anthropogenic global warming and human modification of the North American land surface. The authors of the study say their findings emphasise the importance of global cooperation in addressing climate change.

Using climate models, scientists from the University of Bristol and the Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research (ITP) from the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) found changes over North America can drive atmospheric patterns that intensify South and East Asian rainfall, with an effect nearly half as strong as the Tibetan Plateau’s influence on East Asian summer rainfall.

While researchers have long known the Asian monsoon can influence the climate far beyond Asia, this latest study is the first to reveal the reverse is also true - that the existence of North American continent has teleconnections across the Pacific Ocean and strengthens the East and South Asian summer monsoon rainfall.

Lead author Linlin Chen, PhD student in Physical Geography at the University of Bristol, said: “In the past few decades, when people talk about what factors would drive such a strong monsoon in Asia, they always looked at the Eurasian and African continents, especially the Himalaya and Tibetan region.

“These are indeed large influences. But we know Earth climate is closely connected, and now we have more evidence to show precisely how.”

The study authors first modelled an idealised ‘water’ world with no continents, and then gradually added continents from Eurasia, Africa and India to produce a basic Asian monsoon system. Australia, Antarctica, North and South America, as well as a simplified Tibetan Plateau were added separately, to see how the Asian monsoon would respond.

Dr Alex Farnsworth, a Senior Research Associate at the University of Bristol, also affiliated with ITP, said: “We initially thought Australia would outperform, as it is the closest landmass not previously considered. But the results surprised everyone.

“North America turns out to be the most important extra continent impacting the Asian monsoon. It’s always exciting when the model reveals something unexpected.”

The team discovered the North American continent creates a heating centre in summer. This then creates atmospheric ripple effects, which strengthens the North Pacific subtropical high-pressure system and widens the north Hadley cell. This enhanced anticyclone pushes stronger westward flows toward Asia, causing a deeper convection and bringing more moisture from the ocean, thus intensifying rainfall over East and South Asia.

The Tibetan Plateau also plays a role but, remarkably, the North American impact is nearly half as strong as that of the Tibetan Plateau over the East Asian summer rainfall. The seasonal rains in Asia sustain more than a billion people. In recent years, people in Asia experienced more extreme flood and drought, which climate scientists suggest is due to global warming, which then causes more extreme climate events.

Co-author Paul Valdes, Professor of Physical Geography at the University of Bristol, added: “This study reveals how deeply connected the Earth’s climate systems are: local changes can trigger global effects. Everyone is responsible for both the local and global climate changes.”

Discovery of North America’s role in Asia’s monsoons offers new insights into climate change 
Idealized continental and orographic configuration. The abbreviations represent continents of Eurasia (Eura), India (Ind), Africa (Afr), Australia (Aus), Antarctica (Ant), North America (NA) and South America (SA). Shading indicates land-sea-mountain mask: green for land (0 m elevation), light blue for ocean, and copper for elevated terrain (Tibet, up to 4,500 m). Dashed rectangles indicate analysis domains: brown for East Asian Summer Monsoon (EASM) region; purple for Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) region (same in the following figures).

Credit

Linlin Chen

Discovery of North America’s role in Asia’s monsoons offers new insights into climate change 

june-July-August-September (JJAS) precipitation anomalies from flat-continent sensitivity experiments. Precipitation anomalies (mm/day, shading) show the effects of adding individual continents to the EuraIndAfr baseline: (A) North America (EuraIndAfrNA - EuraIndAfr), (B) South America (EuraIndAfrSA - EuraIndAfr), (C) Australia (EuraIndAfrAus - EuraIndAfr), (D) Antarctica (EuraIndAfrAnt - EuraIndAfr). Inset maps show global land-sea-mountain masks, where white shading highlights the landmass added in each sensitivity experiment.

Credit

Linlin Chen

 

Even untouched ecosystems are losing insects at alarming rates, new study finds





University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Colorado Meadow - Field Site 

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Colorado meadow used for Keith Sockman's 20 year study.

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Credit: Keith Sockman (UNC-Chapel Hill)





A new study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill shows that insect populations are rapidly declining even in relatively undisturbed landscapes, raising concerns about the health of ecosystems that depend on them. 

Keith Sockman, associate professor of biology at UNC-Chapel Hill, quantified the abundance of flying insects during 15 seasons between 2004 and 2024 on a subalpine meadow in Colorado, a site with 38 years of weather data and minimal direct human impact. He discovered an average annual decline of 6.6% in insect abundance, amounting to a 72.4% drop over the 20-year period. The study also found that this steep decline is associated with rising summer temperatures. 

“Insects have a unique, if inauspicious position in the biodiversity crisis due to the ecological services, such as nutrient cycling and pollination, they provide and to their vulnerability to environmental change,” Sockman said. “Insects are necessary for terrestrial and fresh-water ecosystems to function.” 

The findings address a critical gap in global insect research. While many reports of insect declines focus on habitats altered by human activity, few examine populations in relatively pristine areas. This study demonstrates that dramatic losses can occur even where direct human impacts are minimal, suggesting climate change may be a key driver. 

“Several recent studies report significant insect declines across a variety of human-altered ecosystems, particularly in North America and Europe,” Sockman said. “Most such studies report on ecosystems that have been directly impacted by humans or are surrounded by impacted areas, raising questions about insect declines and their drivers in more natural areas.” 

Sockman emphasizes the urgency of these results for biodiversity conservation: “Mountains are host to disproportionately high numbers of locally adapted endemic species, including insects. Thus, the status of mountains as biodiversity hotspots may be in jeopardy if the declines shown here reflect trends broadly.” 

This research highlights the need for more comprehensive monitoring of insect populations in a variety of landscapes and adds urgency to addressing climate change. By showing that even remote ecosystems are not immune, the study underscores the global scale of the biodiversity crisis. 

The research paper is available online in the journal Ecology at: https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ecy.70187 

 

When getting a job makes you go hungry



University of Utah Health





Key points:

  • Utah refugees face very high levels of food insecurity.

  • Food insecurity spikes when refugees become ineligible for food assistance.

  • Proposed solutions include improving education about resources and increasing access to gardens.

IMPACT: Timely interventions to reduce food insecurity could benefit health and save the U.S. healthcare system billions.

Three months ago, you left your country fearing for your life. 

Now, you’re learning to navigate a new city, where the street signs are in a new language. You’re learning to navigate social interactions that operate on slightly different rules. You’re applying for jobs to support your family. You’ve figured out how to get to the grocery store that sells food your kids will eat—and how to use food assistance programs to get it.

Except that today, those benefits have unexpectedly stopped working. You have no job, no savings, no broader network of friends. And now, you have no food.

What will you do?

This is the situation that faces many newcomers to the U.S. Incoming refugees face very high levels of food insecurity—up to 85% for particularly vulnerable populations. Now, a new study published in PLOS One identifies unexpected “danger zones” when the risk of going hungry is highest and proposes solutions to help new residents thrive.

Patterns of hunger

Researchers interviewed Utah refugees from eight countries to learn when they were most likely to have trouble affording food—and some of the answers were “shocking,” says Nasser Sharareh, PhD, research assistant professor of population health sciences at University of Utah Health and the first author on the study. Most surprisingly, he says, “Finding a job can make refugees more food insecure.”

Resettlement agencies heavily focus on empowering refugees to attain financial independence by getting a job. But often, a refugee’s first job is unstable and low-paying. Their new income is enough to disqualify them from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP benefits, or food stamps)—but not enough to cover food on top of housing and utilities. And if that first job ends, refugees find themselves back in the deep end.

Another pressure point is when SNAP applications should be renewed. When they arrive in the U.S., refugees are enrolled into SNAP by a caseworker at a resettlement agency. But to maintain benefits, most refugees must reapply for SNAP every six months. Many aren’t informed that they need to do this—or taught how to reapply. Some people whose SNAP benefits expired went without benefits for up to two months, despite being eligible for them the whole time.

Information is key

Interviewed participants proposed a variety of strategies that could help address or reduce food insecurity—and one of the most actionable is better information. Translated information on topics like food banks and how to apply for SNAP could be a low-cost measure to help empower refugees to find enough food.

Refugees also proposed increasing access to gardens so that they could grow their own food. “Most of these refugees have a gardening and farming background,” Sharareh says. “This is what they are good at.”

A program called New Roots connects refugees with opportunities to grow food and sell it in farmers’ markets. But most interviewed refugees were unfamiliar with the program—another area where simply improving information could make a difference.

Sharareh emphasizes that reducing food insecurity will benefit the economy as a whole, due to reduced societal and health care costs from food insecurity-related diseases. “Food insecurity is costing the U.S. health care system more than $53 billion annually,” he says. “So besides having a public health impact, addressing food insecurity can have a positive economic impact on U.S. society.”

In the future, Sharareh hopes to continue to collaborate with community partners, resettlement agencies, and refugee organizations throughout Utah to develop some of the strategies refugees suggested, especially by addressing the information gap. “We can at least make sure that refugees know where to go when they need help,” he says. “These refugees are exploring a new culture, a new society, a new language, and will become U.S. citizens. They need time. But in the meantime, what if we just make sure that they have the information they need?”

 

If you’re having trouble getting enough food, you can call 211 or apply for SNAP here.

You can find more resources for Utah refugees here or in-person at the Utah Refugee Center.

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The results are published in PLOS One as “Addressing food insecurity among U.S. refugees, considering the temporal patterns of food insecurity after resettlement: Qualitative insights from Utah.”

The work was supported by the Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine at the University of Utah’s Vice President of Research Incentive Seed Grant Competition.

 

U.S. Biofuel Imports Slump After Blending Mandate Change

Biodiesel imports to the United States fell to their lowest in ten years over the first half of the year after the federal government axed subsidies for such imports at the start of the year.

From 2025, the subsidies, at $1 per gallon of biodiesel and renewable diesel, remained in effect for domestic producers of the fuel only, Reuters recalled in a report on the news, which comes from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Per the EIA, biodiesel imports between January and June averaged 2,000 barrels per day, compared with 35,000 barrels daily for the first half of 2024. Renewable diesel imports stood at an average of 5,000 barrels daily, down from 33,000 barrels daily a year ago.

In addition to the removal of subsidies for imported biofuel, consumption was affected by doubts about the future prospects of biofuels under the Trump administration, as well as sub-zero margins for domestic biofuel refiners.

“Compared with 1H24, U.S. consumption of renewable diesel was down about 30% in 1H25, and biodiesel consumption was down about 40%. This lower consumption reduced demand for both imported and domestically produced biofuels,” the Energy Information Administration said.

Imports of biofuels are expected to remain subdued through 2026 because of the change in incentives, even though consumption of biodiesel and renewable diesel is set to increase in the second half of the year because of the fuel blending mandates under the Renewable Fuel Standard program.

Earlier this year, the Trump administration proposed an increase in biofuel blending requirements for the next two years to boost reliance on domestic supply and reduce imports. For 2026, the amount proposed by the EPA is 24.02 billion gallons, which would be up from 22.33 billion gallons for this year. For 2027, the proposed blending mandate is 24.46 billion gallons.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

Uranium Shortage Jeopardizes Nuclear Renaissance

Tight supply of uranium could interfere with global plans for a boost in nuclear generation capacity growth, the World Nuclear Association has warned.

According to the industry body, global uranium demand is set to increase by over 30% to 86,000 tons over the next four years, further rising to 150,000 tons by 2040, the Financial Times reported.

While demand rises, however, supply will be shrinking, with output from existing mines set to fall by half in the decade between 2030 and 2040. Based on that, the World Nuclear Association said.

“As existing mines face a depletion of resources in the next decade, the need for new primary uranium supply becomes even more pressing,” the association warned. “Considerable exploration, innovative mining techniques, efficient permitting, and timely investment will be required.”

The World Nuclear Association’s warning echoes an earlier one, made by the International Energy Agency in April. In a report on nuclear energy, the IEA said the sector was enjoying renewed interest but that supply of its key ingredient was getting increasingly tight, because new nuclear power plants were being built faster than uranium mining was expanding.

“More than 70 gigawatts of new nuclear capacity is under construction globally, one of the highest levels in the last 30 years, and more than 40 countries around the world have plans to expand nuclear’s role in their energy systems,” the IEA's Fatih Birol said at the time.

The World Nuclear Association, for its part, reported that global nuclear generation capacity was on track to increase twofold to 746 GW by 2040. A lot of that new generation capacity will be in China. Meanwhile, starting a new uranium mine takes between 10 and 20 years, which would create a gap between demand and supply for the nuclear fuel.

“The whole ecosystem needs to be in equilibrium, and it’s not,” the chief executive of Energy Fuels, a U.S. uranium miner, said. “There are clouds on the horizon.”

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com