The Long-Term Impact of Direct Capture Approaches to Carbon Dioxide Removal - Preprint

7 views
Skip to first unread message

Geoengineering News

unread,
Oct 31, 2025, 6:23:30 AM (9 days ago) Oct 31
to CarbonDiox...@googlegroups.com
https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.20593

Authors: Al Jay Lan J. Alamin, Melquezedec James T. Cruz, Bryan S. Hernandez, Eduardo R. Mendoza

23 October 2025

Abstract 
Understanding the similarities and differences of the long term impact of different carbon dioxide removal (CDR) techniques is essential in determining the most effective and sustainable strategies to mitigate climate change. In particular, direct ocean capture (DOC) has emerged as a promising approach. In contrast to direct air capture (DAC) which separates carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, DOC performs the separation directly from seawater before storing it in geological reservoirs. In this study, we construct and analyze a kinetic system for CDR via DOC using chemical reaction network theory. Our analysis reveals the necessary conditions for the existence of positive steady states and highlights the potential for multistationarity, where the carbon cycle may admit multiple positive steady states, emphasizing the critical importance of addressing tipping points, thresholds beyond which the system could undergo irreversible changes. Furthermore, we examine conditions under which certain carbon pools exhibit absolute concentration robustness, remaining resistant to change regardless of initial conditions. We also determine the conditions for the carbon reduction capability of the model with the DOC intervention. Importantly, a comparative analysis is then presented, where we compare the DOC model with the well-established DAC model by Fortun et al., and explore an integrated DOC-DAC approach for CDR. This comparison is important given that DAC is already being implemented in large-scale projects, while DOC remains in its early stages with limited trials and is geographically constrained to oceanic vicinity. Our comparative modeling framework provides valuable insights into the long-term impacts and complementary roles of DOC, DAC, and their integration into broader CDR strategies for climate mitigation.

Source: arXiv
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages