Carbon Dioxide Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Carbon Dioxide stocks.

Carbon Dioxide Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 22 KMI It's Time to Look at 3 High-Yield Large-Cap Energy Stocks
Nov 22 ET Trump’s Oil and Gas Donors Don’t Really Want to ‘Drill, Baby, Drill’
Nov 21 KMI Kinder Morgan (KMI) Laps the Stock Market: Here's Why
Nov 21 ET Energy Transfer: Still Not Too Late To Buy
Nov 21 OXY Occidental CEO Warns US Is at Risk of Losing Energy Independence
Nov 21 ET Energy Transfer set for seven straight sessions of gains
Nov 21 ET Energy Transfer Unusual Options Activity
Nov 21 KMI Helmerich & Payne Earnings Miss Estimates in Q4, Revenues Surpass
Nov 21 SLB Schlumberger: Buy While The Market Is Asleep On Digital Transformation
Nov 21 ET Brokers Suggest Investing in Energy Transfer LP (ET): Read This Before Placing a Bet
Nov 21 NGS Top 2 Energy Stocks You May Want To Dump This Month
Nov 21 KMI Here's Why You Should Retain Enbridge Stock in Your Portfolio
Nov 21 OXY 3 No-Brainer Warren Buffett Stocks to Buy Right Now
Nov 21 KMI 3 No-Brainer Energy Stocks to Buy With $1,000 Right Now
Nov 21 ET Energy Transfer Has Lots of Fuel to Grow its 7%-Yielding Dividend in 2025 and Beyond
Nov 21 ET Energy Transfer (ET): Fueling America’s Future Under $25
Nov 20 SLB Wall Street Analysts See Schlumberger (SLB) as a Buy: Should You Invest?
Nov 19 KMI Investing in Kinder Morgan (NYSE:KMI) three years ago would have delivered you a 107% gain
Nov 19 OXY Oil Glut Set to Thwart Trump’s Call to ‘Frack, Frack, Frack’
Nov 19 NPWR NET Power's (NYSE:NPWR) Earnings Are Weaker Than They Seem
Carbon Dioxide

Carbon dioxide (chemical formula CO2) is a colorless gas with a density about 53% higher than that of dry air. Carbon dioxide molecules consist of a carbon atom covalently double bonded to two oxygen atoms. It occurs naturally in Earth's atmosphere as a trace gas. The current concentration is about 0.04% (412 ppm) by volume, having risen from pre-industrial levels of 280 ppm. Natural sources include volcanoes, hot springs and geysers, and it is freed from carbonate rocks by dissolution in water and acids. Because carbon dioxide is soluble in water, it occurs naturally in groundwater, rivers and lakes, ice caps, glaciers and seawater. It is present in deposits of petroleum and natural gas. Carbon dioxide has a sharp and acidic odor and generates the taste of soda water in the mouth. However, at normally encountered concentrations it is odorless.As the source of available carbon in the carbon cycle, atmospheric carbon dioxide is the primary carbon source for life on Earth and its concentration in Earth's pre-industrial atmosphere since late in the Precambrian has been regulated by photosynthetic organisms and geological phenomena. Plants, algae and cyanobacteria use light energy to photosynthesize carbohydrate from carbon dioxide and water, with oxygen produced as a waste product.CO2 is produced by all aerobic organisms when they metabolize organic compounds to produce energy by respiration. It is returned to water via the gills of fish and to the air via the lungs of air-breathing land animals, including humans. Carbon dioxide is produced during the processes of decay of organic materials and the fermentation of sugars in bread, beer and wine making. It is produced by combustion of wood and other organic materials and fossil fuels such as coal, peat, petroleum and natural gas. It is an unwanted byproduct in many large scale oxidation processes, for example, in the production of acrylic acid (over 5 million tons/year).It is a versatile industrial material, used, for example, as an inert gas in welding and fire extinguishers, as a pressurizing gas in air guns and oil recovery, as a chemical feedstock and as a supercritical fluid solvent in decaffeination of coffee and supercritical drying. It is added to drinking water and carbonated beverages including beer and sparkling wine to add effervescence. The frozen solid form of CO2, known as dry ice is used as a refrigerant and as an abrasive in dry-ice blasting. It is a feedstock for the synthesis of fuels and chemicals.Carbon dioxide is the most significant long-lived greenhouse gas in Earth's atmosphere. Since the Industrial Revolution anthropogenic emissions – primarily from use of fossil fuels and deforestation – have rapidly increased its concentration in the atmosphere, leading to global warming. Carbon dioxide also causes ocean acidification because it dissolves in water to form carbonic acid.

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