Tech News
← Back to articles

Frontier is helping Arbor build a “vegetarian rocket engine” to power data centers

read original related products more articles

Frontier, the organization backed by Stripe, Google, and Meta, announced Tuesday it is paying startup Arbor Energy to remove 116,000 tons of carbon dioxide by the end of the decade.

The deal gives Arbor $41 million to help it build its first commercial-scale power plant in southern Louisiana that will burn waste biomass to generate electricity for a data center. At the same time, it’ll sequester the resulting CO 2 , shipping it via pipeline to be buried deep underground.

“We are able to market it as two products,” Arbor co-founder and CEO Brad Hartwig told TechCrunch. “We’re selling carbon-free base load energy as well as net [carbon] removals.”

The twofer is inherent to the technology, which is called BiCRS, or biomass carbon removal and storage.

“One of the great things about BiCRS is that you get the capture part for free because plants are drawing down the CO 2 , and all you have to do is strip it out in and store it,” Hannah Bebbington, head of deployment at Frontier, told TechCrunch.

Burning biomass is older than human civilization, but Arbor adds a space age twist to the practice. Hartwig, who previously worked at SpaceX, drew inspiration from rocket turbomachinery in developing Arbor’s power plant. The company’s first facility will generate between five and 10 megawatts of electricity. Hartwig said the company is working to steadily improve the output.

In the power plant, waste biomass is first transformed into syngas. The startup had previously intended to use an off-the-shelf gasifier, but none of them were up to snuff, so it developed its own. In the gasifier, supercritical CO 2 — which is carbon dioxide under immense pressure — sourced from the power plant itself helps dissolve the biomass, releasing hydrogen and carbon monoxide gas.

Techcrunch event Save $450 on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Save $450 on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Boston, MA | REGISTER NOW

The syngas and CO 2 then head to a combustion chamber, where the syngas is burned using pure oxygen. That produces water vapor, heat, and more carbon dioxide. (The presence of CO 2 in the combustion chamber is by design, Hartwig said, helping to moderate temperatures so the machine’s metal doesn’t melt.)

The hot gases are then fed through a turbomachinery to generate electricity. Most of the CO 2 is diverted to a pipeline that’ll transport it for permanent storage, while a portion of it is routed back to the gasifier.

... continue reading