![Net Power's Rodney Allam stands astride his creation: a power plant that captures its own carbon, at no extra cost. (Photo by Michael Thad Carter, for Forbes). Net Power's Rodney Allam stands astride his creation: a power plant that captures its own carbon, at no extra cost. (Photo by Michael Thad Carter, for Forbes).](https://ccs.boilermakers.org/sites/default/files/styles/blog_612x380/public/0208_tech-netpower-rodney-allem_1200x630-1200x630.jpg?itok=60_Pfgii)
Net Power's Rodney Allam stands astride his creation: a power plant that captures its own carbon, at no extra cost. (Photo by Michael Thad Carter, for Forbes).
Tech-Science |
Forbes
February 27, 2017
GROWING UP IN ENGLAND after World War II, "all the youngsters like me were obsessed with aircraft," says Rodney Allam. "I had a picture on my wall of Chuck Yeager when he broke the sound barrier in the Bell X-1, the earliest turbine-driven aircraft." Those high-powered machines were inspirational.
Source Post Date:
February 21, 2017
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