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Google indications deal to purchase carbon removal credits from Indian farms

Google will buy carbon credits from an Indian effort that turns large amounts of agricultural waste into biochar a kind of charcoal that eliminates carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and returns it to the soil, it said on Thursday.

The offer - signed by Google and Indian provider Varaha - is among the greatest ever including biochar, and is the tech giant's very first foray into India's carbon dioxide removal (CDR). sector.

Google is one of a variety of big tech business aiming to. offset emissions through CDR, which describes a series of. interventions designed to remove CO2 currently in the atmosphere. and oceans.

While some designers are taking a look at pricey new. technologies that draw out CO2 directly from the air, services. like biochar might show a less expensive near-term alternative.

Biochar is an appealing technique to carbon elimination due to the fact that. it has the capability to scale worldwide, using existing. technology, with favorable side effects for soil health, stated. Randy Spock, Google's carbon removal lead.

Varaha will buy waste from hundreds of smallholder farms in. India and build reactors to transform it into biochar, which can. sequester CO2 for hundreds of years. It will also be provided to. farmers as an option to fertilisers.

Google will purchase 100,000 tons of carbon credits from now. up until 2030. Varaha's chief executive Madhur Jain said there was. scope for fast development, with waste from India's farms capable of. generating sufficient biochar to save more than 100 million tons of. CO2 every year.

CDR represent just a fraction of international carbon trading. however is anticipated to proliferate as countries and corporations. seek brand-new ways to offset emissions.

However, critics say CDR is no alternative to emission cuts. They also alert that options like biochar deal no warranty. the CO2 will be eliminated permanently.

We are going to deal with peak warming, stated Jain. Even if. something simply decreases

(source: Reuters)