Local company turns rice waste into ‘carbon gold’
Graphyte buys rice hulls and forestry waste from mills in Pine Bluff, Ark., and processes them into bricks. It layers the bricks in the ground with technology to assure that water is not present. By the end of 2025, it intends to have capacity to keep 65,000 tons of carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere. (Courtesy/Graphyte)
Graphyte is trying to be one part of the climate solution, straight from the ground up.
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Barclay Rogers Pine Bluff Shay Sebree Western Foods Shawn Brown University of Memphis ACRE Subscriber Only GraphyteWe’re in the final countdown of 2025. ⌛🪩🎉
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Jane Roberts
Jane Roberts has reported in Memphis for more than 20 years. As a senior member of The Daily Memphian staff, she was assigned to the medical beat during the COVID-19 pandemic. She also has done in-depth work on other medical issues facing our community, including shortages of specialists in local hospitals. She covered K-12 education here for years and later the region’s transportation sector, including Memphis International Airport and FedEx Corp.
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