XPRIZE and Musk Foundation Name 23 Winners in Five Million Dollar Carbon Removal Student Competition
Selected from 195 University-Affiliated Proposals, Winning Teams Showcased New Concepts & Supporting Technologies for Scalable Carbon Dioxide Removal
Competing student teams had the opportunity to submit their concepts for an award in one of two tracks, Carbon Dioxide Removal Demonstrations or Measurement, Reporting, and Verification Technologies. Winning student teams are able to use funds to compete in subsequent rounds of XPRIZE Carbon Removal or to develop key supporting technologies which will enable carbon dioxide removal. Points of focus for the two award tracks were as follows:
· Carbon Dioxide Removal Demonstrations: Awards of US$250,000 to student teams intending to compete for the XPRIZE Carbon Removal Milestone and Grand Prize awards across the various carbon removal pathways: Air, Land, Rocks, Oceans. Teams needed to convince the judges that their proposed carbon removal projects would make them competitive applicants in the overall competition. This was the main focus of the Student Awards; the majority of awards are in this category.
· Measurement, Reporting, and Verification Technologies: Awards of US$100,000 for the development of technologies that may not directly remove CO2, but will enable carbon removal. Technologies or methodologies for improving the standards of assessment, or the precision, accuracy, and time required for carbon measurements were considered.
Representing ten countries and 31 international educational institutions, the winners of the Carbon Removal Student Competition, included:
Student Carbon Removal Demonstrations:
· Answer of Biochar (AOB) from Northeastern University, China (China)
· E-quester from the University of Toronto (Canada)
· BioCORE from the University of Munich (Germany)
· Biosorra from IESE Business School and the Fuqua School of Business (Spain & United States)
· Bison Underground affiliated with the University of Oklahoma (United States)
· Blue Symbiosis from the University of Tasmania IMAS AMC (Australia)
· C2 (C-Squared) from Virginia Tech and the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry (Germany & United States)
· Carbon Down Under from Southern Illinois University, Carbondale (United States)
· CyanoCapture from the University of Oxford (United Kingdom)
· Holocene Climate from Stanford University (United States)
· KFC from Hohai University, Tianjin University, Shanghai Ocean University, and Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences (China)
· Mississippi State Energy Club - BECReative Energy from Mississippi State University (United States)
· Monash Carbon Capture and Conversion (BioTech) from Monash University (Australia & Malaysia)
· SASIITB from Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay (India)
· Skyrenu Technologies from Université De Sherbrooke and Inrs-Eau Terre Environnement Research Centre (Canada)
· Sydney Sustainable Carbon from the University of Sydney (Australia)
· Takachar (Safi Organics) from the University of British Columbia, Northeastern University and IISC Bangalore (Canada, India, Kenya & United States)
· UW-Madison Civil and Environmental Engineering from the University of Wisconsin, Madison (United States)
Measurement, Reporting, and Verification Technologies:
· ACIDD Project from the University of Miami (United States)
· BJU Global Challenges from Bob Jones University (United States)
· Environmental Sensing from the University of Wyoming (United States)
· PlantVillage from Pennsylvania State University (United States)
· Working Trees from Stanford University (United States)
In order to be eligible for the Carbon Removal Student Competition, student teams needed at least 50% of their members to be currently enrolled in an educational institution with the support of an academic advisor or business leader able to act as a formal mentor. All submissions were reviewed by a panel of expert third-party judges who considered the innovation, ability to reach gigaton scale, team resources and capabilities as well as project plan feasibility in their selection process.
“We want to make a truly meaningful impact. Carbon negativity, not neutrality. The ultimate goal is scalable carbon extraction technologies that are measured based on the ‘fully considered cost per ton’ which includes the environmental impact. This is not a theoretical competition; we want teams that will build real systems that can make a measurable impact and scale to a gigaton level. Whatever it takes. Time is of the essence,” said Elon Musk, Founder and CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, in a previous statement.
Launched in April, XPRIZE Carbon Removal is a US$100M four-year global competition that invites innovators and teams from anywhere on the planet to create and demonstrate solutions that can pull carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere or oceans. To win the grand prize, teams must demonstrate a working solution at a scale of at least 1000 tonnes removed per year; model their costs at a scale of 1 million tonnes per year; and show a pathway to achieving a scale of gigatonnes per year in future, as validated by a third party.
“Today’s college and graduate students have proclaimed that solving the climate crisis is one of the most important objectives of their generation. It’s for this reason that this student competition is so critical. Our mission is to engage, inspire and guide the next generation of climate entrepreneurs,” said Peter H. Diamandis, Founder and Executive Chairman of XPRIZE.
Any carbon negative solution is eligible: nature-based, direct air capture, oceans, mineralization, or anything else that achieves net negative emissions, sequesters CO2 durably, and shows a sustainable path to ultimately achieving gigatonne scale.
“The climate crisis is an existential threat that demands both immediate action, and a long-term commitment to bringing Earth’s carbon cycle back into balance for future generations,” said Dr. Marcius Extavour, Vice President of Climate and Environment at XPRIZE. “We’ve already begun to feel the impacts of the climate crisis in our day-to-day lives, and the data shows us that we need both immediate action on emissions reductions, and sustained innovation to develop additional tools like carbon removal. That’s why this prize is so important. It’s about mobilizing and facilitating the development of scalable solutions that can make a real difference in stabilizing the climate over the coming decades.”
For more information on XPRIZE Carbon Removal, to view the prize guidelines or to register, please visit xprize.org/carbonremoval.
About XPRIZE
XPRIZE is a global future-positive movement of over 1M people and rising, delivering truly radical breakthroughs for the benefit of humanity. XPRIZE inspires and empowers a global community of problem-solvers to positively impact our world by crowdsourcing solutions through large-scale competitions, tackling the world’s grandest challenges in exploration, environment and human equity. Active competitions include the $100 Million XPRIZE Carbon Removal with Elon Musk, $15 Million XPRIZE Feed the Next Billion, $10 Million XPRIZE Rainforest, $10 Million ANA Avatar XPRIZE, $5 Million XPRIZE Rapid Reskilling and $1 Million Digital Learning Challenge. Donate, sign up or join a team at xprize.org.
About The Musk Foundation
The Musk Foundation creates grants made in support of: renewable energy research and advocacy; human space exploration research and advocacy; pediatric research; science and engineering education; and development of safe artificial intelligence to benefit humanity.
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Website: https://www.xprize.org/
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