Across 100,000 acres in the vast agricultural heartland of Australia, an unusual approach is taking root to slow down the wrecking ball of climate change.
Farmers are trying to tap the superpowers of tiny subterranean tendrils of fungus to pull carbon dioxide out of the air and stash it underground.
It’s part of a big bet that entrepreneurs and investors around the world are making on whether dirt can clean up climate pollution.
Like Loam Bio, companies like Andes and Groundworks Bio Ag are also experimenting with microbes.
Silicate Carbon is milling leftover concrete into a fine powder, while several companies are scorching crop waste into charcoal.
Organizations:
Farmers
Locations:
Australia, Australian, Mati