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Carbon Removal

A cloud and mine tailings.
Carbon Removal

Carbon Removal Buyers Are Pumped About Industrial Waste

What the heck is “surficial mineralization”?

AM Briefing

The Zeal of the Inverter

On New York’s solar farmland, German nuclear, and Argentinian gas

Yellow
Climate Tech

Funding Friday: Beyond Carbon Certification

A new fundraise from Isometric, plus more of this week’s — and last week’s! — big money moves.

Green
Podcast

Anthropic and the Future of the Buzzy Carbon Removal Buyer’s Club

Rob talks with Hannah Bebbington Valori, head of Frontier Climate, about the group’s new $915 million fund.

Blue
Measuring pollution.

Are We Too Obsessed With Carbon Accounting?

A new Searchlight Institute report joins a growing chorus arguing that corporate climate targets do more harm than good.

Green
Carbon Removal

Tensions Mount at Greenhouse Gas Protocol as Scientist Resigns in Protest

The move by University of Pennsylvania researcher Danny Cullenward intensifies a debate over integrity at the carbon accounting organization.

A handshake amidst smokestacks.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

A well-known scientist has resigned from the independent oversight board of the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, renewing questions about the integrity of one of the world’s most important arbiters of carbon emissions standards.

Danny Cullenward, who is also an economist and lawyer, notified the organization’s leadership on Monday that he no longer has “any confidence in the Protocol’s governance structure,” according to his resignation letter, which he posted publicly. He had previously tried to sound alarms about the organization and its lack of transparency in a paper he published in April.

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Carbon Removal

The Sorry State of Carbon Removal

A new scientific report on the state of the industry shows a growing gap between what we can do and what we need to do.

Carbon capture.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The gap between the world’s current capacity to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and the amount we’ll need to remove to materially address climate change is so large, it's hard to fathom crossing it. Now, a new report warns that the chasm is widening.

The third State of Carbon Dioxide Removal report, published on Tuesday, finds that while carbon removal research and deployment has advanced significantly in the past two years, it is still not growing quickly enough to reach the scale required to support the Paris Agreement temperature limits. Carbon emissions, meanwhile, have continued to rise globally, raising the amount of carbon removal required in turn.

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