When I was a school kid, a lot of what we learned in history and geography centered on who invented what, what was produced (manufactured or grown) where, and how (sort of) things were made.
Every ton of new steel manufactured spits out two tons of carbon dioxide into the environment....making steel accounts for about 8 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, according to the World Steel Association. (Source: Boston Globe)
Those emissions are thanks in large part of the coal that fuels the industry.
So there are a number of companies looking into how they can swap coal use out for something more environmentally friendly. One such company is Massachusetts' very own Boston Metal, a Woburn-based startup dedicated to finding a sustainable way to produce iron. (Note: Woburn was once one of the largest leather-producing towns in New England. Their high school athletic teams are called the Tanners, and their mascot is a snorting bull. Leather gotta come from somewhere.)
The startup, Boston Metal, wants to help the steel industry reduce its dependence on burning coal-based fuel and use electricity instead — ideally sustainably produced electricity from sources such as hydropower or solar. Many of the world’s steelmakers, points out Boston Metal chief executive Tadeu Carneiro, “have made pledges to be carbon neutral by 2050, and they still don’t have the solutions to get there.” His company wants to be one of those solutions.
Why focus on iron? Because it's a "key ingredient" of steel. And its making is a big culprit when it comes to noxious emissions.
In traditional steel manufacturing, a special form of coal is used to fuel a reaction that turns iron ore, an oxide, into pure iron. Then you can add elements like chromium to the molten iron to make stainless steel, or manganese to make structural steel, explains Adam Rauwerdink, a senior vice president at Boston Metal. But the iron production stage “is where the overwhelming majority of the emissions come from,” he says.
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