Clean green A 30 ha carbon-capturing plant is being set up in Morocco, in the Sahara desert. The commercial demonstration facility will use natural seaweed to sequester CO2, with the goal of reducing the cost of carbon capture to less than US$50 per ton. Morocco World News reports that the project will be implemented by UK start-up Brilliant Planet, which recently closed a second round of fundraising with US$12 million to construct the plant. The carbon-capturing process will involve replicating the growth conditions of a type of seaweed, producing large quantities of micro-algae in open-air ponds on coastal desert land. It will not require any freshwater. Raffael Jovine, chief scientist and co-founder of the start-up, says the facility will be powered by solar energy. ‘Per unit area, this approach sequesters up to 30 times more carbon per year than rainforests, while it also de-acidifies the local coastal seawater back to pre-industrial levels.’ 26 April 2022 Image: Brilliant Planet