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Sunday, February 15, 2026

CRT closes the Carbon Loop - just like Nature does it.

CEWT Foundation Series The Carbon Cycle, Human Disruption, and System Restoration 1. The Natural Carbon Cycle – A Balanced Exchange For millions of years, carbon circulated in equilibrium between atmosphere, oceans, soils, and life. Photosynthesis absorbs CO2. Respiration and decomposition return it. Oceans exchange CO2 depending on temperature. Carbon moves — but remains within the active system. 2. The Disruption – Fossil Carbon Injection Fossil fuels are geologically stored carbon. Burning coal, oil, and gas transfers ancient carbon into the atmosphere. This is one-way injection — not recycling — resulting in accumulation and imbalance. 3. System Correction – Closing the Loop System stability requires eliminating new fossil carbon inputs and restoring circular carbon flows powered by renewable energy. 4. CEWT System Logic CEWT’s Carbon Recycling Technology keeps carbon in circulation while renewable hydrogen provides the energy input. The objective is not eliminating carbon — but eliminating fossil carbon disruption. Foundation Statement: Nature operates in cycles. Instability begins when we break the loop. Stability returns whe

Friday, February 13, 2026

CRT applies the principle of a Circular Economy.

The circular economy is now well established for materials. We design systems to reuse metals, recycle plastics, recover water, and minimise virgin resource extraction. Industrial resilience increasingly depends on keeping materials in productive loops. But one major material still operates largely in a linear model: Carbon. Today, much of our energy system relies on extracting virgin geological carbon and releasing it into the active cycle. If circularity means reducing dependence on virgin inputs and operating within regenerative loops, then applying circular principles to carbon becomes the next logical step in industrial evolution. Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) is built around that idea — circulating carbon within the short-term cycle rather than relying on continuous geological extraction. Whether viewed through a climate lens or a resource-efficiency lens, the structural principle is the same: shift from extractive carbon flows to circular carbon systems. The circular economy conversation may now be ready to include carbon itself. #CircularEconomy #IndustrialSystems #CarbonCycle #EnergyTransition