Today’s Solutions: May 10, 2026

In July, Apple made a pledge to be carbon-neutral by 2030. Its a lofty target for the tech giant, but it has a novel material that it believes will help the company accomplish its goal.

The new material is a “low-carbon” aluminum that it can use to make its sleek laptops. The lightweight metal is chemically the same as the mass-produced version used in products like foil, soda cans, bike frames, and car doors. But it’s made using a different industrial process — one that doesn’t result in the direct release of greenhouse gases.

On average, the electrochemical process of smelting aluminum contributes about 14 percent of total emissions from global aluminum production. Another 70 percent comes from the electricity used to run the smelters, said Guðrún Arnbjörg Sævarsdóttir, an associate professor at Reykjavik University in Iceland.

However, in places where smelters tap into clean power, there is virtually no emissions from electricity use. So the biggest carbon challenge is the smelting process itself.

Apple’s low-carbon aluminum supplier uses an alternative electrochemical process that emits only oxygen. The Montreal-based supplier, Elysis, uses materials that can separate aluminum without causing a chemical reaction. 

This is like the Holy Grail of aluminum production,” Sævarsdóttir said of the efforts.

Apple is poised to become the first company to include some of this low-carbon aluminum in its products. But while the laptops prove this new approach is viable, researchers are still figuring out how to scale up the material’s production so it can be an option for the entire aluminum sector. If they succeed, the alternative process could eliminate a significant chunk of aluminum’s carbon footprint, which amounts to around 1 percent of global emissions.

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

MIT to publish free plans online for a cheap emergency ventilator

Imagine a class project from over a decade ago ended up holding the solution to a global issue? Well that's the case for a ...

Read More

The case for growing nectar-rich plants in your garden this spring

The nectar created by flowering plants is a significant food source for many of the critters we share our environment with. Those of us ...

Read More

New York schools commit to nurturing mental health through mindful breathing

Meet Noah Hill, a third-grader at Brooklyn's Dr. Ronald E. McNair Public School 5. He's discovered a simple yet significant technique for finding peace ...

Read More

The surprising power of penguin poop: how guano-made clouds may help cool the...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In the chilly heart of Antarctica, a bunch of tuxedoed waddlers may be doing more for the planet ...

Read More