What you’re suggesting is called a CO2 scrubber, and is an **outrageously** expensive piece of technology that pretty much only sees use in industrial filtering applications and airtight environments such as spacecrafts and submarines.
Pulling CO2 out of our atmosphere for something as trivial as fizzy drinks when there are many chemical processes that generate a ton of CO2 just as a byproduct does not make economic sense for anyone.
despite what you infer from the news, there isnt really THAT much CO^2 in the atmosphere, it only makes up 0.04% of the atmosphere (up from the 0.02% it should be which is causing a lot of problems). To carbonate 1 litter of soda, you would perfectly have to extract all of (and only) the CO^2 in a cube 2 meters across.
we dont have the technology to do that without chilling the entire cube down to -57°c. cooling things es expensive, expecialy when there are so many chemicals you can mix together to directlt make CO^2.
Capturing a tonne of CO2 from the air costs somewhere around $500-1000, although people hope to drop that to around $200 in the future. Cleaning it from other stuff not yet included. Getting it as waste product from other industrial processes is basically free, and the infrastructure for that exists already while the air capture stations would have to be built first. There are only a few research projects at the moment.
We aren’t going to “run out” of carbon dioxide. In the grand scheme of things, it is extremely abundant.
The issue is that there is a certain grade of CO2 which is suitable for use in food and beverages. There are strict rules as to what impurities may be present and how much.
If there is a hiccup in the supply chain for beverage-grade CO2, scrubbing the air would be a last resort. There are probably dozens of other ways to do it. But the bottling plant has to make a decision. If they think the shortage is temporary then they may just wait it out but with costs going up in the short term. If they think the shortage is permanent, then they have to develop a new supply chain and/or retool the factory which means higher costs in the short term.
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