Remove Carbon Remove Climate Remove Estonia Remove Transportation
article thumbnail

UP Catalyst offering carbon-negative graphite for European battery supply chain

Green Car Congress

UP Catalyst , an Estonia-based company developing a method to produce sustainable carbon nanomaterials and graphite from CO 2 ( earlier post ), says that it can produce carbon-negative graphite, consuming 3.7 Whether it is natural or fossil fuel-derived synthetic graphite, the estimated carbon footprint it accounts for is 5.3

Carbon 186
article thumbnail

Neste joins eFuel Alliance

Green Car Congress

The eFuel Alliance is based in Berlin and Brussels and brings together companies and organizations that share the goal of establishing and promoting power- and bio-based synthetic fuels to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from transport. All solutions are needed in the fight against the climate crisis. Throughout the world, more than 1.3

Lithuania 247
article thumbnail

EEA: Higher EU greenhouse gas emissions in 2010 due to economic recovery and cold winter

Green Car Congress

The higher share of gas led to an improved carbon intensity of fossil fuel consumption in many Member States. Road transport emissions continued to fall in 2010, despite more demand for freight transport. The relative growth in emissions was highest in Estonia, Finland, Sweden and Latvia.

2010 225
article thumbnail

EEA says industrial air pollution cost Europe up to €169 billion in 2009; some 37% attributed to CO2

Green Car Congress

Estimating the magnitude of costs associated with future climate change impacts is very uncertain. Sectors excluded from the EEA analysis include transport, households and most agricultural activities—if these were included the cost of pollution would be even higher.

Pollution 268
article thumbnail

OPG, GE Hitachi to deploy small modular reactor at Darlington station in Canada

Green Car Congress

The Darlington SMR will provide a critical new source of clean nuclear energy for Ontario’s future projected energy capacity needs—a demand widely expected to ramp up as transportation and other sectors electrify, using Ontario’s clean power to help decarbonize the broader economy.

Canada 334