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Carbon Removal

A standardized test and carbon capture.
Climate

A Standardized Test for Carbon Removal

Absolute Climate wants to grade all carbon credits the exact same way.

Climate

Why Climate’s Hardest Problem Might Need a Carbon Market

What’s a big multinational like Microsoft to do when it wants to build with clean concrete?

Green
Economy

The Breakthrough That Could Unlock Ocean Carbon Removal

How Equatic solved seawater’s toxic gas problem and delivered a two-for-one solution: removing carbon while producing green hydrogen

Blue
Pollution and clean air.

Toward a More Perfect Carbon Removal Standard

Anu Khan is pushing carbon credits to better serve the public good.

Yellow
Technology

Carbon Removal’s Stamp of Approval

The Department of Energy is advancing 24 companies in its purchase prize contest. What these companies are getting is more important than $50,000.

Heirloom DAC.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Heirloom Carbon</p>

The Department of Energy is advancing its first-of-a-kind program to stimulate demand for carbon removal by becoming a major buyer. On Tuesday, the agency awarded $50,000 to each of 24 semifinalist companies competing to suck carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere on behalf of the U.S. government. It will eventually spend $30 million to buy carbon removal credits from up to 10 winners.

The nascent carbon removal industry is desperate for customers. At a conference held in New York City last week called Carbon Unbound, startup CEOs brainstormed how to convince more companies to buy carbon removal as part of their sustainability strategies. On the sidelines, attendees lamented to me that there were hardly even any potential buyers at the conference — what a missed opportunity.

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Technology

Why Is No One Talking About Biochar?

It may or may not be a perfect climate solution, but it is an extremely simple one.

Earth sitting in a pile of biochar.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images, Oregon Department of Forestry</p>

Low-tech carbon removal is all the rage these days. Whether it’s spreading crushed rocks on fields or injecting sludgy biomass underground, relatively simplistic solutions have seen a boom in funding. But there’s one cheap, nature-based method that hasn’t been able to drum up as much attention from big name climate investors: biochar.

This flaky, charcoal-like substance has been produced and used as a fertilizer for millennia, and its potential to lock up the carbon contained in organic matter is well-documented. It’s made by heating up biomass such as wood or plants in a low-oxygen environment via a process called pyrolysis, thereby sequestering up to 40% to 50% of the carbon contained within that organic matter for hundreds or (debatably — but we’ll get to that) even thousands of years. Ideally, the process utilizes waste biomass such as plant material and forest residue left over from harvesting crops or timber, which otherwise might just be burned.

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