- Microsoft pays billions to inject manure underground to cancel carbon carbon emissions
- Vaulted in depth rotates wastewater and manure in a climate fixing buried at 5,000 feet
- Carbon compensation prices can drop, but right now, each ton costs about $ 350
Microsoft spends once again strongly for the elimination of carbon – but this time, the strategy is not based on futuristic machines or carbon department forests, but rather involves waste, in particular human and animal excrement, manure and agricultural by -products.
The company has concluded a multi -year agreement with Vaulted Deep to eliminate this organic material by injecting it underground.
The method is designed to prevent the decomposition from freeing carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere.
An underground solution to an atmospheric problem
According to INC., Vaulted Deep will manage the burial of 4.9 million metric tonnes of waste in the next 12 years.
While the company would have billed $ 350 per tonne for the elimination of carbon, CEO Julia Reichelstein said: “The price mentioned is not the actual sum that the technology giant has paid” and added that the costs should drop over time.
However, if the price indicated was exact, the agreement could exceed $ 1.7 billion, but for the moment, no exact figures have been disclosed on each side.
The justification behind this method is rooted in the prevention of the harmful effects of current waste elimination practices.
“Generally, what happens to this waste today is that they go to a discharge, they are thrown in a navigable track, or they are simply distributed on land for elimination. In all these cases, they break down into CO2 and methane,” said Reichelstein.
“This contributes to climate change. And then often, especially when widespread on earth, all these pathogens go directly to people’s groundwater. ”
The vaulted Deep process is to convert waste into a dense suspension, then pump it over 5,000 feet below the surface.
This approach not only locks the atmosphere material, but also bypasses the ecological risks associated with the surface elimination.
The idea may seem unconventional, but it is part of a broader scheme of technological companies that rush for evolving carbon compensation strategies.
Microsoft, as well as other cloud giants such as Google and Amazon, face the environmental cost of data centers, installations that require a massive energy entrance, often from fossil fuel sources.
The workloads of the AI intensifying this request, the need to find creative mitigation solutions has become urgent.
Earlier in 2025, Microsoft also joined atmosplear to kidnap 6.75 million tonnes of carbon dioxide, showing its desire to explore different strategies.
That said, it is not clear to what extent the method of gaping waste at waste is evolving or lasting will be in the long term, especially if the costs remain high and the public perception becomes critical.
Via Tomshardware




