Keeping global temperatures below the limit set in the 2015 Paris Agreement requires rapid cuts in greenhouse emissions. However, scenarios consistent with the Paris limit also assume heavy reliance ...
Novel carbon dioxide removal technologies such as direct air carbon capture and storage (DACCS), will be essential if the ...
PARIS – By 2050, humanity must durably remove four times as much carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air as today to cap global warming below the crucial target of 2 deg C, researchers said on June 4.
Taking its cue from the UN Emissions Gap Report. Countries’ current plans to extract CO 2 from the atmosphere are off-track to comply with the 1.5-degree limit. Since 2010, the United Nations ...
Many of the world’s top scientists now expect global warming to soar past the 1.5 degree Celsius target – the point of irreversible climate change. Reducing emissions is no longer enough.
The agency proposed its first approval of an experiment off the coast of Massachusetts. The Biden administration has for the first time offered regulatory support for a research project seeking to ...
To the editor: Your article on new scientific interventions to address global climate issues opens with the questionable claim that direct air capture to sequester atmospheric carbon dioxide ...
Carbon dioxide emissions continue to rise. Many countries have started to remove the greenhouse gas from the atmosphere.
Global Thermostat was one of the world’s first direct air capture companies. But it never managed to build a commercial plant. The co-founder of a pioneering carbon removal company once said its ...
The first camp holds developers liable for carbon stored underground over extended timeframes, such as the 50-year liability imposed by U.S. federal law, which doubles to 100 years for projects ...
A Swiss start-up unveiled its second plant sucking carbon dioxide from the air and stocking it underground, scaling up its capacity tenfold with the aim of eliminating millions of tons of CO2 by 2030.
With Mammoth's 72 industrial fans, Swiss start-up Climeworks intends to suck 36,000 tonnes of CO 2 from the air annually to bury underground, vying to prove the technology has a place in the fight ...