Baobab Trees  These baobab trees, native to Africa and Australia, are an important  part of the Madagascar deciduous forest. Some baobabs are believed to be  thousands of years old, but since the wood does not create annual  growth rings, it is difficult to track their growth. The trees are a  hardy breed though, with some Madagascar species growing directly out of  limestone rock.
Trees are great absorbers of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and  inhibitors of climate change -- that's why treehuggers hug them so much.  But leave it to humanity to engineer a better tree. A synthetic tree,  currently being tested as a prototype, ensnares carbon about 1,000 times  faster than a real tree.
The "tree" uses plastic leaves that capture the carbon dioxide in a  chamber. The carbon dioxide is then compressed into liquid form. The  tree captures the carbon without the need for direct sunlight, which  means that, unlike traditional trees, the synthetic trees can be stored  in enclosed places such as barns, used anywhere, and transported from  one site to another regardless of conditions. 
Lackner says the captured CO2 could be used to create fuel for jet engines and cars, the two most common carbon emitters. In other cases, the CO2 could be used to enhance current production of vegetable produce.
Klaus Lackner, a professor at Columbia University who is developing the  tree, met with U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu last month to talk about  the concept. In an interview with CNN, Lackner said the synthetic tree  is "several hundred times better at collecting CO2" than  windmill generators. 
Lackner says that for every 1,000 kilograms of  carbon dioxide collected, the tree emits just 200 kilograms. This ratio  is more than enough to warrant the relatively high cost of building the  trees (about the same as a new automobile) or retrofitting coal plants.
 Each synthetic tree could collect about 90,000 tons of carbon per year.
by "environment clean generations" 


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