Environmental Integrity Project’s Post

A direct air capture carbon removal and storage company has announced two new Carbon Capture and Storage projects in northwest Louisiana. The company, Heirloom, estimates that the sites will eventually be able to remove 320,000 tons of CO2 each year, equivalent to about 76,000 gas-powered cars driven for a year. Neighboring Texas is opening more than a million acres of offshore waters for CO2 injection wells, although the 13 wells are still awaiting EPA permits.  Communities across the US are facing an increasing number of proposals from companies to capture, transport, and inject carbon underground, either to store it or to use it extract more oil and gas. As Louisiana and Texas continue to announce and request these project proposals, the EPA should oversee these projects by strengthening the laws and regulations governing the technology.     In response to the rise of carbon capture projects and requests, EIP has created mapping tools, reports, fact sheets, and news articles to inform the public and decision makers about the risks of carbon capture, use, and sequestration, including gaps in current laws and regulatory shortfalls governing the untested process.    Read the AP article: https://lnkd.in/eDFB_wFn   Read the Inside Climate News article: https://lnkd.in/ezbqrDDp   View our resources: https://lnkd.in/eMj2bRhx     #ccs #carboncapture #environmentaljustice #carbon #greenhousegas #storage #publicresources #epa #texas #louisana #LavacaBay #Shreveport 

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