The project will convert locally sourced wood waste to carbon-negative hydrogen while safely sequestering over 450,000 metric tons of CO2.

Biofuel

Mote to build biomass plant near Sacramento, California

Mote to build biomass plant near Sacramento, California

Bild: Plant rendering

Mote Inc. has received $1.2 million in grant funding from the US Forest Service, the California Department of Conservation, and the California Department of Forestry (CAL FIRE) to establish its second biomass to hydrogen and carbon sequestration plant in partnership with the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD). Upon completion, the facility would produce approximately 21,000 metric tons per year (MTPY) of carbon-negative hydrogen for use in thermal power generation and transportation. 

Using gasification and what Mote calls proprietary integration of proven technology, the company can process wood waste from farms, forestry and urban sources to produce hydrogen with remaining CO2 captured and permanently placed underground in saline aquifers.

The plant would also sequester over 450,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) annually, equal to the CO2 emissions of over 100,000 cars each year. The project is supported by forestry stakeholders due to Mote’s capacity to create value from large amounts of wood waste. The project can utilize up to 300,000 MTPY of forest residues and wood waste from regional forest management programs, such as those in the Sierra Nevadas.

Based in Los Angeles, California, Mote is a clean energy startup reimagining biomass for the climate era.