Today’s Solutions: May 08, 2024

For Australian brewery Young Henrys, fighting climate change means including an unusual ingredient in their beer-making process: algae. The fermentation of beer releases large amounts of CO2, but the brewery uses an innovative algae tank to absorb their emissions and produce as much oxygen as two and a half acres of wilderness.

Working with the University of Technology Sydney, the brewery designed a system that involves two bioreactors to cultivate algae. Both contain CO2, oxygen, and algae, but one serves as a control and one is connected to a fermentation tank so produced CO2 flows into it. The second tank consistently contains 50 percent fewer algae, meaning the experimental bioreactor is successfully consuming the harmful greenhouse gas. 

Now, the team is working to make the technology scalable for larger manufacturers. Fortunately, the system could be easily adopted by breweries both large and small to reduce their carbon footprint.

It takes a tree approximately two days to absorb the CO2 released from producing one six-pack of beer, but incorporating easily-maintained algae systems into breweries is a cost-effective solution for in-house emissions reductions that can even help breweries achieve carbon neutrality.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

USDA implements new school meal standards to reduce added sugars

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced significant changes to school meal laws, including the first time added sugars will be banned on ...

Read More

Are we entering the era of airborne protein? Introducing a global revolution ...

Finland has become the focus of a revolutionary shift in food production with the opening of the world's first large-scale factory for producing protein ...

Read More

White-tailed eagles return to southern England after 240-year hiatus

For centuries, there's been an eagle-shaped hole in the skies over England where the majestic white-tailed eagle once soared. The enormous raptor — its ...

Read More

What!? Scientists discover life 3,000 ft below Antarctic ice shelf

Scientists have been forced to rethink the limits of life on Earth after accidentally stumbling upon marine organisms living on a boulder 900 meters ...

Read More