this post was submitted on 26 Jan 2026
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[–] Lexam@lemmy.world 83 points 3 days ago (36 children)
[–] tyler@programming.dev 70 points 3 days ago (35 children)

It’s not worse. It’s carbon neutral (as long as the energy source is renewable like the sun). Any carbon it takes in will be released exactly back to where it was. It’s a much much better option than digging up oil.

On top of that, there are currently no likely possibilities of replacing gasoline for things like planes. So replacing their gas with carbon neutral gas will improve the situation by 100%.

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 27 points 3 days ago (14 children)

Any carbon it takes in will be released exactly back to where it was.

Except it won't be. Combustion is not a perfect CxHy O2 > CO2 + H2O reaction. Theres a bunch of other side reactions happening, NOx, unburned hydrocarbons, particulate matter, carbon monoxide. There are lots of challenges to continuing to utilize hydrocarbon fuels, especially in mobile/small scale applications where you can't clean the exhaust stream.

[–] tyler@programming.dev 2 points 2 days ago

The particulate matter won’t occur in a hydrocarbon that is generated, that comes from imperfect processing of crude. If you pull the carbon directly out of the air there are no particulates.

But yes it will still be carbon neutral. No additional carbon will be released back into the atmosphere.

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