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Startups are using ‘rock dust’ to make agriculture carbon friendly

Agriculture is responsible for more than 10% of global carbon emissions, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. But while agriculture is a massive carbon offender, it could now be part of a solution, as startups are trying new ways of using nature to save itself.

Farmers have long spread crushed lime on their fields to balance soil acidity, improve its structure and increase the nutrients available for crops. Startups such as Lithos, UNDO Carbon and California-based Eion are experimenting with several types of carbon-absorbing rocks that can accomplish what lime does while permanently removing carbon from the atmosphere at the same time. This is a process known as enhanced rock weathering.

Eion, for example, uses a volcanic rock called olivine. It grinds it up to make a dust.

"We apply a rock dust onto farms, and that helps farmers condition the soil or make the soil better for improvements," said Anastasia Pavlovic, CEO of Eion. "Then over time, that manages to secure and sequester carbon, permanently removing it from the atmosphere."

Olivine is similar to agricultural lime in terms of improving the soil, but when it rains, olivine goes through a chemical process that causes it to absorb carbon dioxide from the air permanently.

"By 2030, Eion will be removing about 2 million cars, the equivalent of 2 million cars, of carbon from the atmosphere every year," Pavlovic said.

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