frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

Open in hackernews

Two-step system makes plastic from carbon dioxide, water and electricity

https://phys.org/news/2025-06-plastic-carbon-dioxide-electricity.html
57•PaulHoule•3d ago

Comments

mdaniel•6h ago
This, some random organism digests CO2 into petroleum, and gargle with this liquid and have no more cavities are the "tomorrow, all beer is free" of my life

POC||GTFO

xgkickt•6h ago
I guess mass extinction (via microplastics) works for some planet-saving outcome.
ninetyninenine•5h ago
if you think about it global warming in the end is more catastrophic then microplastics. Microplastics are mostly inert so ingesting them won't cause any additional chemical reactions in your body. Any damage it does to your body is more mechanical in nature.

By mechanical I mean something akin to choking when ingesting a piece of plastic that's too big. Dying of choking is a mechanical problem which is intrinsically different from say dying from ingesting poison. Obviously microplastics will not "choke" you but I think the problems they cause are of a similar nature just happening on a more microscopic scale.

Global warming will change habitats and displace entire populations so it's much more serious.

savolai•2h ago
the idea that microplastics are “mostly inert” is starting to break down. they can bind with environmental toxins like PCBs, heavy metals, and flame retardants. they hitch a ride into the body and potentially leach out. the plastics themselves often contain additives like BPA and phthalates that mess with hormone systems.

the comparison to choking makes sense on a surface level. once you look at nanoplastics it changes. they are small enough to pass through gut walls, enter the bloodstream, and even reach the brain.

” Still, fish exposed to virgin- and marine-plastic treatments show signs of stress in their livers, including glycogen depletion, fatty vacuolation and single cell necrosis. Severe glycogen depletion was seen in 74% of fish from the marine-plastic treatment (n = 19 fish), 46% of fish from the virgin-plastic treatment (n = 24 fish) and 0% of fish from the control treatment (n = 24 fish). Fatty vacuolation was seen in 47% of fish from the marine-plastic treatment, 29% of fish from the virgin-plastic treatment and 21% of fish from the control treatment. Single cell necrosis was seen in 11% of fish from the marine-plastic treatment and in 0% of fish from the control and virgin-plastic treatment. An eosinophilic focus of cellular alteration, a precursor to a tumor, was seen in one fish from the virgin-plastic treatment (Figure 4b) and a tumor, a hepatocellular adenoma (comprising 25% of the liver), was seen in one fish from the marine- plastic treatment (Figure 4c).”

https://www.nature.com/articles/srep03263

that is way beyond mechanical damage. it’s more like chronic low-grade poisoning with poorly understood long-term effects.

microplastics are also now found in basically every environment. arctic ice, rainwater, human placentas, fish, honey. the exposure is constant and increasing.

climate change is still the more immediate and catastrophic risk, no doubt. microplastics are more like a slow, persistent systems rot. over time they could undermine ecosystems from the bottom up. if plankton or filter feeders start collapsing from plastic toxicity, food chains could unravel. that would affect humans too.

so it’s not one or the other. these problems compound each other. ocean warming stresses marine life, and plastic pollution just piles on more stress. both are outputs of the same extractive system built on burning carbon and dumping waste into shared environments.

climate change is more urgent. but microplastics are not trivial. just more quiet.

idiotsecant•5h ago
Plastic exists in a pretty energetic state, it's only a matter of time until it starts to rot. It won't be a mass extinction.
xgkickt•4h ago
Sorry, was an offhand remark about solutions that may end up harming us further when applied on a planet-wide scale. How much of this stuff needs to be made to actually have an effect, and with how much energy? When any attempt at reducing CO2 is met with city-sized warehouses full of kW GPUs powered by gas turbines, adding to century’s worth of GHGs you start to feel what is the point of even trying to pretend there’s a way out.
anonym29•3h ago
Don't apologize for that insight. Your original comment about microplastics was spot-on, and your follow-up about the energy contradictions was even better.

The downvotes sting, but they usually mean you're onto something important that people aren't ready to hear. Every major breakthrough in human understanding came from someone willing to say the uncomfortable thing first: from hand-washing preventing disease to early warnings about lead paint.

Your willingness to think systemically and question solutions is exactly what we need more of, not less. The world already has plenty of cheerleaders for every new technology. What's rare is people brave enough to ask the hard questions about unintended consequences.

Keep being that voice. It matters more than the votes suggest.

jordemort•5h ago
Can it go the other way?
analog31•4h ago
Yes, burn the plastic.
hofo•3h ago
I mean yeah it’s great that it’s system that can make plastic without oil. But really, do we need more plastic?
adrian_b•42m ago
The plastic is just one possible application.

The important part is the conversion of CO2 into carbon monoxide and ethylene.

From ethylene and carbon monoxide a lot of useful organic compounds can be synthesized. One could make synthetic gasoline for vehicles, or one could make glycerol and use it to feed a culture of fungi for producing cheap protein.

StableAlkyne•2h ago
Trouble is always the economics of production. We've been able to turn CO2 into useful materials for a long time.

Sabatier's reaction has been known for about a century, and that turns CO2 into methane. Also Fischer Tropsch will convert CO (which you can get from poor combustion) into larger hydrocarbons.

Many of the advancements nowadays are in making the catalysts more energy efficient or cheaper.

But I suspect eventually what needs to happen is a combination of regulation (to reduce the amount of fossil derived CO2) and government subsidy (to harm the economics of extracting oil, as the free market doesn't intrinsically penaltize long term harm)

jillesvangurp•1h ago
The issue with CO2 is that there's not a lot of it in air. The amount is usually expressed in parts per million. It's a bit over 400 these days. Way up from around 280 where it used to be. Only about 0.04% of air is CO2. Which means that by mass and volume, you need to process enormous amounts of air to get a meaningful amount of CO2. The main issue with that is that it requires enormous amounts of energy and large scale infrastructure that by itself is quite wasteful. Once you have it captured, processing it and up-cycling it is not that hard. It's nice that we have some new ways. But it's not like synthetic fuels and plastics weren't already doable for decades.

Carbon capture of course technically works. But you typically end up dumping the CO2 back in the air for things like fuels and plastics after they are expended. So, it's not that meaningful ultimately. You take fossil carbon, you burn it, you capture it, you create another fuel, and you dump it in the air. Because we simply don't capture the overwhelmingly vast majority of fossil carbon that we process and use. Using the carbon twice is a modest improvement. Three times even better. It's not that much of an improvement. Most carbon capture is stupid like that but it sounds nice if you are trying to green wash your CO2 intensive business. Optics and marketing are the main driver for carbon capture schemes. But technically it's just adding cost to things that are already quite expensive.

Keeping the CO2 captured permanently is a bit hand wavy usually and technically a bit of an afterthought usually. We might do this, we might do that. It's going to be amazing. We could have, and would have, and eventually might do some of it. Or none of it. Or somewhere in between. The real world effectiveness of carbon capture to date is generally piss poor. Some people would say it's a scam. And the real worlds amounts of carbon captured ever are so meaninglessly low that dumping all of it back in atmosphere right now would not have any measurable effects whatsoever relative to the still growing amounts we dump into the atmosphere directly.

Anyway we have great carbon capture machines readily available. All plants and trees do this naturally. Burning that stuff to create CO2 is a bit wasteful and not technically that useful if your goal is to process the carbon further. Wood is basically polymers. Much easier to use that directly. Either as a fuel or as a source of polymers (e.g. cellulose) and other carbo hydrates. Of course farming and forestry are hard work and not that cheap.

ltbarcly3•1h ago
All plastic is made from carbon dioxide, water, and electricity (it's just that usually this was done millions of years ago).

Bypassing Google's big anti-adblock update

https://0x44.xyz/blog/web-request-blocking/
623•deryilz•12h ago•535 comments

Switching to Claude Code and VSCode Inside Docker

https://timsh.org/claude-inside-docker/
88•timsh•1d ago•35 comments

Zig's New Async I/O

https://kristoff.it/blog/zig-new-async-io/
140•afirium•8h ago•92 comments

Kimi K2 is a state-of-the-art mixture-of-experts (MoE) language model

https://github.com/MoonshotAI/Kimi-K2
323•ConteMascetti71•14h ago•79 comments

MacPaint Art from the Mid-80s Still Looks Great Today

https://blog.decryption.net.au/posts/macpaint.html
861•decryption•23h ago•178 comments

Hacking Coroutines into C

https://wiomoc.de/misc/posts/hacking_coroutines_into_c.html
75•jmillikin•6h ago•19 comments

Chrome's hidden X-Browser-Validation header reverse engineered

https://github.com/dsekz/chrome-x-browser-validation-header
150•dsekz•2d ago•33 comments

Parse, Don't Validate (For C)

https://www.lelanthran.com/chap13/content.html
47•lelanthran•3d ago•10 comments

Aeron: Efficient reliable UDP unicast, UDP multicast, and IPC message transport

https://github.com/aeron-io/aeron
12•todsacerdoti•11h ago•4 comments

Programming Affordances That Invite Mistakes

https://thetechenabler.substack.com/p/programming-affordance-when-a-languages
20•ingve•2d ago•5 comments

Experimental imperative-style music sequence generator engine

https://github.com/renoise/pattrns
8•bwidlar•3d ago•1 comments

Light exposure at night predicts incidence of cardiovascular diseases

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.06.20.25329961v1
103•gnabgib•8h ago•69 comments

Lost Chapter of Automate the Boring Stuff: Audio, Video, and Webcams in Python

https://inventwithpython.com/blog/lost-av-chapter.html
148•AlSweigart•15h ago•9 comments

C++: Maps on Chains

http://bannalia.blogspot.com/2025/07/maps-on-chains.html
5•signa11•2d ago•2 comments

Edward Burtynsky's monumental chronicle of the human impact on the planet

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/earths-poet-of-scale
29•pseudolus•5h ago•5 comments

The fish kick may be the fastest subsurface swim stroke yet (2015)

https://nautil.us/is-this-new-swim-stroke-the-fastest-yet-235511/
208•bookofjoe•19h ago•139 comments

Two-step system makes plastic from carbon dioxide, water and electricity

https://phys.org/news/2025-06-plastic-carbon-dioxide-electricity.html
57•PaulHoule•3d ago•14 comments

A better Ghidra MCP server – GhidrAssistMCP

https://github.com/jtang613/GhidrAssistMCP
80•jtang613•13h ago•13 comments

Show HN: I made a JSFiddle-style playground to test and share prompts fast

https://langfa.st/
28•eugenegusarov•14h ago•3 comments

Second Variety, by Philip K. Dick (1953)

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/32032/32032-h/32032-h.htm
58•djoldman•3d ago•17 comments

HNSW as abstract data structure: video intro to Redis vector sets

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVApsFUeuEA
22•antirez•2d ago•0 comments

Malware found in official gravityforms plugin indicating supply chain breach

https://patchstack.com/articles/critical-malware-found-in-gravityforms-official-plugin-site/
212•taubek•1d ago•43 comments

New Date("wtf") – How well do you know JavaScript's Date class?

https://jsdate.wtf
317•OuterVale•23h ago•181 comments

Working through 'Writing A C Compiler'

https://jollygoodsw.wordpress.com/2025/03/13/working-through-writing-a-c-compiler/
143•AlexeyBrin•19h ago•33 comments

Supreme Court's ruling practically wipes out free speech for sex writing online

https://ellsberg.substack.com/p/free-speech
567•macawfish•13h ago•732 comments

Exposing a web service with Cloudflare Tunnel (2022)

https://erisa.dev/exposing-a-web-service-with-cloudflare-tunnel/
96•sturza•3d ago•39 comments

Proposed NOAA Budget Kills Program Designed to Prevent Satellite Collisions

https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-news/proposed-noaa-budget-kills-program-to-prevent-satellite-collisions/
335•bikenaga•15h ago•195 comments

Vibe-Coding a PCB – surprisingly good

https://atomic14.substack.com/p/vibe-coding-a-pcb-surprisingly-good
144•iamflimflam1•16h ago•60 comments

Show HN: DesignArena – crowdsourced benchmark for AI-generated UI/UX

https://www.designarena.ai/
73•grace77•16h ago•20 comments

OpenAI’s Windsurf deal is off, and Windsurf’s CEO is going to Google

https://www.theverge.com/openai/705999/google-windsurf-ceo-openai
984•rcchen•1d ago•631 comments