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A professional portrait of a man with medium skin tone, short curly hair, and a confident smile. He is dressed in a dark navy blazer over a light blue collared shirt. His arms are crossed in a relaxed pose. The background is a textured dark blue, adding a formal and professional feel to the image.

DOE Awards $270K to Advance National Laboratory IP Towards Commercialization

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s Office of Technology Transitions (OTT) has announced nine Phase 2 winners for the Making Advanced…

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 A professional portrait of a man with a beard and short, reddish-brown hair. He is wearing a light blue blazer over a white button-up shirt. The man is smiling confidently with his arms crossed. The background is a soft, textured mix of dark blue and gray tones, giving the image a polished and formal look.

Enhancing biodegradability is the focus of Circular Biosciences

Imagine embedding an enzyme inside a product so that it can biodegrade much faster than it normally would. Well, that is the focus…

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A large industrial air quality system is loaded onto a flatbed trailer, secured with yellow straps. The equipment includes a series of motors, fans, and ducts, with wood piles and green trees visible in the background, indicating an outdoor setting. The equipment appears to be part of an emissions control or filtration unit, ready for transport.

Captis Aire launches two-phase project after securing $2.5 million

One of the first observations we made when we first met Kim Tutin of

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A sign on a wall reading "Holocene" in purple and black. The sign is displayed behind an industrial piece of equipment.

Our first-of-its-kind direct air capture deal forges a path to lower costs

Today we’re announcing a new deal to purchase carbon removal credits from direct air capture provider Holocene, at the lowest price on…

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In a step forward for efforts to acquire the metals crucial to addressing climate change, on Monday a new plant that can extract nickel and cobalt from scrap material opens in Fairfield, Ohio. The resulting metals will be used in new batteries and other clean energy markets.  Extracting metals out of old material avoids the environmental damage of open pit mining and prevents the metals from ending up in the landfill. Many see this as the future, even if it takes decades to become reality.

Environment solution: New metals refinery for nickel and cobalt opens in Ohio

In a step forward for efforts to acquire the metals crucial to addressing climate change, on Monday a new plant that can extract nickel…

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