"Decades ago, San Francisco and the Bay Area were home to the explosion of the information technology sector,” said Matt Haney. “It started small and then it grew to transform the world. We want to have the Bay Area be the similar home for carbon removal.”
"Doing so, he added, could also create a lot of jobs.  “It’s not just folks who can do the engineering and the technology, the financing, but we actually need skilled industrial labor,” Haney said. kqed.org/science/198204…
@MattHaneySF Let’s also use the solutions we already have at hand today… protecting and managing for healthy soils and habitats in urban, natural, and agricultural lands and waters.
@MattHaneySF Your contribution during that phase was banning algebra in 8th grade.
@MattHaneySF Impossible, it's functionally illegal to build physical things in the Bay Area. I'm sure that there will be lots of offices designing the machines in SF, but the equipment will be field tested and installed in Texas and Nevada.