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To remove CO2 from the atmosphere, this former UUֱ postdoc's startup looks to biomass

A person stands next to an icy glacial lake in the Canadian arctic
Published: 22 July 2024

In 2019, while doing post-doctoral research in UUֱ's Department of Natural Resource Sciences, Qinhong Cai (better known as Tammy) travelled to Nunavut to join the , a federal initiative designed to improve marine safety and increase the protection and restoration of coastal and seaway ecosystems. Cai, an environmental engineer, was sent to monitor hydrocarbon contaminants and microbial genomics along the Kivalliq transportation corridor. But after Inuit elders told her about the significant changes they’d observed in the region, her heart was pulled in another direction.

“All this work is important,” she , “and I really enjoyed doing it. But I realized that all that effort won’t be enough if we can’t stop or mitigate global warming.”

In 2020, while still at UUֱ, Cai devoted evenings and weekends to developing her own unique direct air capture (DAC) system. While most DAC systems use massive amounts of heat to separate carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, Cai figured out a novel way to use biomass to achieve the same results.

Cai was still validating the tech in the lab and filing for a patent when she founded  to commercialize her system. The Toronto Star interviewed Cai about the qualities that set Gaia’s system apart, the role DAC must play in our decarbonization efforts and the love she has for the natural world.

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