Facebook Pixel NYC SKYSCRAPERS TURNING TO CARBON CAPTURE TO LESSEN CLIMATE CHANGE | AppleMagazine - technology - Lees dit verhaal op Magzter.com

Poging GOUD - Vrij

NYC SKYSCRAPERS TURNING TO CARBON CAPTURE TO LESSEN CLIMATE CHANGE

AppleMagazine

|

AppleMagazine #603

From the outside, the residential high-rise on Manhattan’s Upper West Side looks pretty much like any other luxury building: A doorman greets visitors in a spacious lobby adorned with tapestry and marble

NYC SKYSCRAPERS TURNING TO CARBON CAPTURE TO LESSEN CLIMATE CHANGE

Yet just below in the basement is an unusual set of equipment that no other building in New York City — indeed few in the world — can claim. In an effort to drastically reduce the 30-story building’s emissions, the owners have installed a maze of twisting pipes and tanks that collect carbon dioxide from the massive, gas-fired boilers in the basement before it goes to the chimney and is released into the air.

The goal is to stop that climate-warming gas from entering the atmosphere. And there’s a dire need for reducing emissions from skyscrapers like these in such a vertical city. Buildings are by far the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions here, roughly two-thirds, according to the city buildings department.

New York state’s buildings also emit more air pollution than any other state’s.

So building owners must make dramatic cuts starting next year or face escalating fines under a new city law. About 50,000 structures — more than half the buildings in the city, are subject to Local Law 97. Other cities such as Boston and Denver followed suit with similar rules.

As a result, property managers are scrambling to change how their buildings operate. Some are installing carbon capture systems, which strip out carbon dioxide, direct it into tanks and prepare it for sale to other companies to make carbonated beverages, soap or concrete.

They see it as a way to meet emissions goals without having to relocate residents for extensive renovations. In this case, the carbon dioxide is sold to a concrete manufacturer in Brooklyn, where it’s turned into a mineral and permanently embedded in concrete.

MEER VERHALEN VAN AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

GEMINI MOVES TOWARD PROACTIVE AI ASSISTANCE

Google is preparing a new step for Gemini that shifts the assistant from reactive responses to proactive suggestions, allowing it to surface information before users explicitly ask for it.

time to read

4 mins

May 01, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

APPLE SHOWS HOW ITS MACBOOK NEO AD CAME TO LIFE

Apple has released a short behind-the-scenes video showing how parts of its MacBook Neo introduction ad were created, offering a closer look at the practical production work behind one of the company’s more playful recent launch films.

time to read

3 mins

May 01, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

CHATGPT RISE PUTS DEVELOPER HIRING UNDER PRESSURE

A new Federal Reserve working paper is putting numbers behind one of the most sensitive questions in the technology labor market: whether generative AI has already slowed hiring for software developers.

time to read

6 mins

May 01, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

OPENAI TURNS TO AMAZON AS CLOUD STRATEGY OPENS UP

OpenAI has announced a multiyear strategic partnership with Amazon and its cloud division Amazon Web Services, marking a major shift in how the company sources the computing power behind its AI systems.

time to read

4 mins

May 01, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

MAC MINI SHORTAGE HITS APPLE'S $599 DESKTOP

Apple's Mac mini is becoming unexpectedly hard to buy in the United States, with the base $599 M4 model sold out on Apple's online store and many upgraded configurations slipping into long delivery delays.

time to read

4 mins

May 01, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

OPENAL STUMBLES AS IPO PRESSURE BUILDS

OpenAI has reportedly fallen short of internal revenue and user-growth targets at a sensitive moment, raising fresh questions about whether the company’s enormous computing commitments are outpacing the business growth needed to support them.

time to read

5 mins

May 01, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

OPENAI PHONE CHIPS ARE STILL JUST A RUMOR

OpenAI is reportedly exploring smartphone chips with Qualcomm and MediaTek, but the project remains unconfirmed and appears to be at a very early stage.

time to read

4 mins

May 01, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

MUSK-ALTMAN TRIAL PUTS OPENAI STRUCTURE AT RISK

Jury selection has begun in Oakland in one of the most consequential legal fights yet to hit the artificial intelligence industry.

time to read

6 mins

May 01, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

SOCIAL MEDIA SCAMS HIT $2.1 BILLION IN LOSSES

Americans lost an estimated $2.1 billion to scams that originated on social media in 2025, according to new data from the Federal Trade Commission.

time to read

4 mins

May 01, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

APPLE ADDS MONTHLY PAY OPTION FOR ANNUAL SUBS

Apple is introducing a new billing option on the App Store that allows users to pay for annual subscriptions in monthly installments, a shift designed to make long-term plans more accessible without requiring upfront payment.

time to read

3 mins

May 01, 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size