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Meaning of decarbonize | Babel Free

Verb CEFR C1
/diːˈkɑːbənaɪz/

Definitions

  1. To remove carbon from something.
    transitive
  2. To clean hard sooty deposits from inside an internal combustion engine.
    transitive
  3. To remove carbon content from iron or steel, either intentionally or accidentally, as by (for example) overheating steel in the presence of air, destroying its former temper and hardness.
    transitive
  4. To reduce or replace fossil fuels by renewable energy in energy production and distribution systems.
    intransitive, transitive

Equivalents

Deutsch dekarbonisieren
Español descarbonizar
Italiano decarbonizzare
Português descarbonizar

Examples

“During the overhaul, the cylinder heads were found to be reusable, as long as they got a good cleaning to decarbonize the valve seat areas.”
“To decarbonize piston rings and ring grooves, remove each ring carefully by spreading the ends just enough to get them clear of the piston top land and lifted off.”
“A blast furnace decarbonizes iron enough that it can be used as input to a steelmaking furnace.”
“Repeatedly scorching a case-hardened tool will ruin the case by decarbonizing it.”
“Efforts to decarbonize the automotive fleet are challenging, but no one wants nightmare-grade climate change, either.”
“Efforts to decarbonize have been facing some challenges lately.”
“In fact, at a time when it is urgent to decarbonize the economy by all means possible, carbon footprinting misses the majority of the footprint of many sectors, either due to technique or lack of data.”
“Climate stories usually start the same way: fire, flood, loss, collapse. The charts are grim. The vibes are worse. But there’s another story in the numbers that starts with what’s working, what’s already being built, and how far we’ve actually come. Hannah Ritchie is a data scientist at the University of Oxford and the author of Clearing the Air, a book that offers encouraging answers to some of our hardest questions about the climate. She’s a “data optimist” who doesn’t ignore the dangers of climate change, but recognizes how the world is decarbonizing faster than most of us realize. The real bottleneck now, Ritchie argues, isn’t technology so much as belief. Belief that progress is still possible without shrinking our world; belief that the cleaner option can also be the better, cheaper one; belief that the future is worth racing toward.”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.

See also

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