 | | | | Links to recent scientific papers, web posts, upcoming events, job opportunities, podcasts, and event recordings, etc. on Carbon Dioxide Removal TechnologyThe capability gap between current decision support tools and the two categories of complexity shaping the CDR sector and the six additional requirements of policymakers seeking to establish a new sector across national economies (Source)For those building, investing, or leading in CDR, Carbon Removal Updates aims to deliver a consistent edge. If you find it valuable, consider supporting its continued growth with a paid subscription. Donate < $10 Get 20% off a group subscription NOTE: If you’d like to submit CDR-related news for our next newsletter, please send it here: Message Andrew Lockley JUMP TO SECTIONTHIS WEEK’S TOP CDR HIGHLIGHTSNorway Commissions First End-to-End BECCS: A first-of-its-kind BECCS project has begun operations in Norway, developed by Inherit Carbon Solutions in partnership with HoopCO2 and Northern Lights. Biogenic CO₂ from a wastewater biogas facility is captured, liquefied, transported, and permanently stored 2,600 metres beneath the North Sea seabed. The project marks a global first for end-to-end BECCS, proving industrial-scale carbon removal is operational. World’s First DAC-Carbonated Beer: Aircapture and Almanac Beer Co. launched the world’s first commercial beer carbonated with CO₂ captured directly from air using on-site direct air capture, reducing reliance on fossil-based supply chains and showcasing carbon utilization in consumer products. CTRL-S Launches to Preserve DAC IP: Jason Hochman, in collaboration with Silvan Aeschlimann and Nicole Williams, has launched CTRL-S (Climate Tech Rescue, License, & Scale) to preserve intellectual property, data, and technical know-how from struggling direct air capture startups. The firm aims to archive and redeploy critical climate tech innovations across industry, preventing loss of valuable R&D as the sector faces funding pressures. First EU CRCF Carbon Deal Structured: ClimeFi has structured the inaugural transaction under the EU’s Carbon Removal and Carbon Farming (CRCF) framework, setting a market standard for durable carbon removals. Through a buyer’s collective including Nasdaq and Adyen, the initiative will secure CRCF-aligned credits from the BECCS Stockholm project, developed by Stockholm Exergi, advancing Europe’s durable removals procurement. Watch the weekly CDR bulletin in under 3 min here:  Read on to unpack more updates: COMMERCIAL NEWSShare RESEARCH PAPERSAuthors: Vishal Sharma , Mayank Prabha TomarSynopsis: This study examines the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism under the Fit for 55, focusing on its impacts on developing countries and alignment with the Paris Agreement and World Trade Organization rules. It finds CBAM may raise costs and limit market access for poorer nations, while raising concerns over fairness, legality, and equity in global climate governance.
Authors: Henrik I. Petersen, Jonathan H. Lindhardt, Natalia Lukasik, et al.Synopsis: This study assesses the Carbon Dioxide Removal potential of Danish biochars from various feedstocks. High-temperature pyrolysis (>575 °C) maximizes inertinite carbon (Cinert), with wood biochar storing 3.05 tCO₂e/t and wheat straw and digestate achieving 2.21 and 1.41 tCO₂e/t, respectively. Sewage sludge shows the lowest potential. Findings highlight feedstock and pyrolysis temperature as key determinants of biochar’s carbon storage capacity.
Authors: Taejun Song, Joohyung Jung and Seongmin SoSynopsis: This review examines the integration of Direct Air Capture with nuclear power to enable negative-emission CO₂ removal. DAC extracts CO₂ from ambient air but is energy-intensive, requiring electricity and heat for sorbent regeneration. Nuclear power offers stable, carbon-free energy to meet these demands. The paper compares DAC configurations, analyzes energy needs, explores integration strategies, and highlights technical and economic challenges for large-scale nuclear–DAC deployment.
Authors: Matthew J. Gidden, Gaurav Ganti, William F. Lamb, Andy Reisinger, Saphira RekkerSummary: Achieving net-negative global CO₂ emissions is essential to stabilize and reduce global temperatures. Carbon removal is critical for offsetting emissions from “hard-to-abate” sectors that persist even at net zero. The allocation of limited carbon removal resources should follow the equity and fairness principles of the Paris Agreement.
Authors: Guoqiang Li, Jakub Zdarta, Teofil Jesionowski, Agata ZdartaSynopsis: This study reviews membrane-based direct air capture (m-DAC) for CO₂ removal from ambient air. It examines recent advances in membrane materials and multistage process designs, highlighting their higher energy efficiency, scalability, and lower carbon footprint compared with conventional DAC. The study identifies current research gaps, technological challenges, and outlines a roadmap for future development, emphasizing m-DAC’s potential as an effective carbon-negative strategy.
Authors: Mark Workman, Aoife Brophy, Astha, Madison Cuthbertson, Lauren McCormack, Edoardo Taricco, Quillan Shaw, Jordan CalverleySynopsis: This article examines the emerging complexity of Carbon Dioxide Removal markets, highlighting the interplay of market creation and demand-driven dynamics. It argues that current policy tools inadequately capture this complexity and advocates for exploratory, participatory approaches. Engaging public and private actors through integrated deliberation can guide investment, reduce risk, and enable timely, robust interventions to scale CDR technologies effectively.
Authors: Stefan Baltruschat, Jens Hartmann, Niels Suitner, Charly A. Moras, Carl Lim, Laura Bastianini, Phil RenforthSynopsis: This study evaluates Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement using ikaite (CaCO₃·6H₂O) as a dissolvable carbonate feedstock. Lab experiments show ikaite dissolves efficiently in cold waters (<10 °C), releasing 85–100 % alkalinity, but exhibits lower efficiency (50–80 %) and rapid partial transformation at 10–26 °C. Results highlight a trade-off between dissolution rate, CO₂ uptake, and particle size, emphasizing temperature-dependent performance for effective OAE deployment.
Authors: Nishu Devi, Xiaohui Gong, Daiki Shoji, Amy Wagner, Alexandre Guerini, Davide Zampini, Jeffrey Lopez, Alessandro F. Rotta LoriaSynopsis: This study investigates Electrochemical Seawater Splitting, demonstrating simultaneous hydrogen production, CO₂ sequestration, and mineral precipitation. By optimizing voltage, current, and CO₂ flow, calcium- and magnesium-based minerals can be efficiently generated for construction and environmental uses. Results highlight seawater electrolysis as a scalable, multifunctional approach combining renewable energy, carbon removal, and sustainable material production.
Authors: Philipp Suessle, Kai Georg Schulz, Joana Barcelos e Ramos, et al.Synopsis: This study evaluates the impacts of Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement on phytoplankton dynamics and particle export in the North Sea. While overall bloom magnitude remained unchanged, elevated pH reduced silica ballasting in suspended and sinking particles, potentially shortening carbon sequestration timescales. Findings highlight how OAE-induced chemical shifts can affect export efficiency, emphasizing the need to consider ecological and biogeochemical interactions for effective and safe CO₂ removal.
Authors: Kirstine Skov, Anežka Radkova, Kitty Agace, Talal Albahri, Matt Aitkenhead, Tzara Bierowiec, David Boldrin et al.Synopsis: This study evaluates a new monitoring method for Enhanced Rock Weathering, a promising Carbon Dioxide Removal strategy. The SAT-C technique improves soil porewater extraction by overcoming moisture limitations, offering greater accuracy and consistency than existing methods. Results show strong agreement with conventional sampling, supporting more reliable MRV and scalable carbon accounting for ERW deployment.
Authors: Kairui Hu, Sining Lyu, Lianzheng Gui, Ning Zhang, Xiaofeng Gao, Jian Zuo, Huabo Duan & Jiakuan YangSynopsis: This review examines carbon dioxide mineralization using alkaline industrial wastes as a pathway for Carbon Dioxide Removal. Materials such as steel slag and gypsum can capture CO₂ and produce useful construction substitutes. The process could remove up to 310 MtCO₂ annually, with additional indirect reductions. Performance varies widely by material and conditions, highlighting both its potential and practical challenges for scaling.
Authors: Kohen W. Bauer, Paulo V. F. Correa, Alex Lupin, et al.Synopsis: This study evaluates deep-sea sinking of kelp as a form of Carbon Dioxide Removal. A year-long experiment found over 90% of biomass decomposed within ~100 days, limiting long-term carbon storage. While some carbon may persist in dissolved forms, ecological impacts were significant, altering benthic communities. The findings highlight key trade-offs and the need for careful, site-specific monitoring.
Authors: Naif Ghazi AltoomSynopsis: This study compares five Carbon Dioxide Removal pathways using a harmonized life cycle and techno-economic framework. By standardizing datasets and costs, it ranks biochar and BECCS as most cost-effective, while DAC remains expensive but flexible. Results highlight trade-offs in land, energy, and permanence, offering robust, uncertainty-informed guidance for policy, investment, and scalable CDR portfolio design.
Authors: Trinh Thao My Nguyen, Arnaud Boussonnie, Aaron Sabin, et al.Synopsis: This study investigates electrolytic marine carbon removal using the Equatic process, a form of Marine Carbon Dioxide Removal. It compares direct and sequential carbonation approaches, finding both achieve high CO₂ removal efficiency (96–98%). Results highlight key kinetic processes and system design factors, such as gas flow rates and mineral reactions, critical for optimizing scalable mCDR systems.
Authors: Siwei Shi, Danna Chang, Guopeng Zhou, Songjuan Gao, Ting Liang, Jun Nie, Jing Huang, Weidong CaoSynopsis: This study examines how green manure–rice rotation enhances soil carbon storage through distinct pathways in different soil types. It shows increased yields and significant gains in Soil Organic Carbon, with sequestration driven by microbial processes and mineral interactions. Outcomes vary by clay content, highlighting texture-specific mechanisms that improve long-term carbon storage and agricultural productivity.
Authors: Lei Li, Mingyu Xie, Nan Jia, Li-Dong Mo, Qiang Yu, Fanjiang Zeng, Xiangyi LiSynopsis: This study quantifies how nitrogen deposition contributes to the terrestrial carbon sink by analyzing retention of reduced (NHx) and oxidized (NOy) nitrogen. It finds about 36% of deposited nitrogen is retained, supporting an estimated Terrestrial Carbon Sink of 0.88 Pg C/yr—around 25% of the global total. Results highlight the importance of nitrogen dynamics and C:N stoichiometry in accurately modeling ecosystem carbon sequestration.
Authors: Leonardo Chiani, Pietro Andreoni, Laurent Drouet, Tobias Schmidt, Katrin Sievert, Bjerne Steffen, Massimo TavoniSynopsis: This study analyzes uncertainties in scaling Direct Air Capture with storage. It finds most scenarios show limited deployment, with only a small chance of gigaton-scale removal by mid-century. Achieving scale requires long-term subsidies exceeding $200–330/tCO₂ and major public investment, highlighting that strong climate policies are essential for DACCS to become a viable, large-scale solution.
Authors: Aimee Titche, Olivia Hawrot, Jack Shield, James S Campbell and Phil RenforthSynopsis: This study evaluates methods for quantifying carbonate in Lime Carbonation Direct Air Capture, crucial for verifying atmospheric CO₂ removal. Five techniques—LOI, TGA, CAC-IR, volumetric calcimetry, and FTIR—were compared for accuracy, precision, throughput, and cost. LOI and CAC-IR performed best, with LOI favored when prioritizing accuracy and precision. The study highlights the need for standardized protocols to ensure reliable carbon accounting and credible carbon credit validation.
Global Nitrogen Deposition Promotes Carbon Sink Formation in Terrestrial Ecosystems (Source)WEB POSTSREPORTSShare Carbon Removal Updates THESESAuthors: Blasinski, CoraSynopsis: This thesis explores how Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage is imagined and legitimized in Sweden. It finds BECCS is framed through a socio-technical vision linking technology, markets, and consensus, positioning forests as both resource and sink. These narratives promote BECCS while sidelining alternative climate solutions, showing how imagined futures shape policy, investment, and the direction of mitigation strategies.
UPCOMING EVENTSMarch 2026April 2026May 2026We have curated a “Carbon Removal Events Calendar.” Explore and stay informed about upcoming events, conferences, and webinars on Carbon Dioxide Removal technology. Sync specific events / all events to your default calendar to ensure you never miss out on important CDR updates. Carbon Removal Events Calendar Add our Carbon Removal Events Calendar to your default calendar in 2 ways:Sync specific event: Click the event → menu (≡) → Share → choose your calendar → Save.Or sync all events: Menu (≡) → Preferences → iCalendar Feeds → Copy URL → Add to your calendar settings → Subscribe.JOB OPPORTUNITIES“Charm Industrial’s mission is to return the atmosphere to 280 ppm CO₂. We convert excess inedible biomass into carbon-rich bio-oil and inject it into underground storage for permanent carbon removal.”
“Alt Carbon is a deeptech science and data company, building agri-infrastructure for climate action. We aim to make South Asia a hub for Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) through technology pathways like Enhanced Rock Weathering and Biochar.”
“pHathom captures CO₂ from biomass power plants and converts it into stable dissolved carbon using limestone for durable storage in the ocean. Our process accelerates the natural weathering of limestone, using a water-based system that reacts flue gas CO2 with a slurry of seawater and crushed limestone to form bicarbonate, a stable form of carbon already abundant in the ocean.”
“CarbonDrop is on a mission to tackle climate change at a truly impactful scale, with a goal to capture gigatons of CO2 per year at a cost orders of magnitude lower than current technologies.”
“At Capture6, we are developing desalination and brine management solutions and creating environmental benefits to accelerate the transition to a decarbonized global economy.”
“At Greenlyte, we are reshaping the global fuel economy with our novel, IP-protected, direct air capture to fuels technology, which shows superior economic potential compared to existing approaches, even reaching fossil prices.”
“InPlanet is scaling Enhanced Rock Weathering (ERW) in tropical agriculture as a powerful method to remove carbon, regenerate soils, and transform the way food is grown in the tropics.”
“CREW’s technology and services make wastewater treatment cheaper and more efficient, while permanently sequestering CO₂.”
“ZeroEx is scaling permanent carbon removal through enhanced rock weathering (ERW) projects in Germany, Brazil, and the United States.”
“Alt Carbon is a deeptech science and data company, building agri-infrastructure for climate action. We aim to make South Asia a hub for Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) through technology pathways like Enhanced Rock Weathering and Biochar.”
Looking for your dream job in CDR? There are 540 jobs available *right now*: check them all out at: CDRjobs Board PODCASTS“Simon Haldrup, founder and CEO of Agreena, joins Climate Rising to discuss how regenerative agriculture can scale beyond early adopters by focusing on farmer economics, data-driven decision-making, and flexible practice “toolboxes” rather than rigid labels. Based on Copenhagen, Agreena combines agriculture, finance and technology to work with 10,000 farmers across 20 countries. The conversation explores why adoption remains challenging despite long-term benefits, including thin margins, short planning horizons, and the risk of yield dips in the initial transition years. Simon also explains how Agreena uses satellite imagery, machine learning, and outcome-based verification to support both carbon credits and carbon insets, and how its two-sided platform aligns farmer incentives with corporate climate commitments. The episode closes with Simon’s perspective on the role of policy, finance, and technology in making regenerative agriculture the “new normal,” and advice for those interested in careers at the intersection of agriculture, climate, and systems thinking.”
Frank Rattey - Planeteers | Rooted in Change | Frank Rattey - Planeteers Rooted in Change 37:39 |
“What if removing carbon fixed ocean acidification?Global climate goals require massive amounts of carbon removal. Therefore, we need to find scalable, permanent solutions. Many efforts continue to rely solely on land-based technologies. Planeteers unlocks the planet’s largest natural carbon sink by enhancing the ocean’s ability to safely absorb and store CO2. By operating at the intersection of ocean science and entrepreneurship, Planeteers provides a vital carbon removal method that permanently locks away emissions while actively combating ocean acidification. Frank, Planeteers’ Founder and Managing Director, joins the podcast to talk about his decision to leave the corporate world, how the company plans to scale and what motivates him to keep going.”
Marta Sjögren, Paebbl on Scaling Carbon-Storing Materials Through Capital and Industrial Alignment | Euvoc EUVC | The European VCEurope’s industrial growth is increasingly about execution and innovation in new materials. The competitivness question remains: what can be built, financed, and scaled in the real world… 6 days ago “Europe’s industrial growth is increasingly about execution and innovation in new materials. The competitivness question remains: what can be built, financed, and scaled in the real world.Marta Sjögren, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of Paebbl, joins Carmel Rafaeli, Founding Partner at The Table, and our very own Andreas Munk Holm for a conversation that moves beyond climate ambition and into the mechanics of building industrial companies.Paebbl has developed a process that takes captured CO₂ and converts it into a stable mineral, effectively locking carbon away while replacing emissions-intensive materials such as cement. It is a technically complex solution with a clear industrial application. But the real challenge is not only scientific. It is financial, operational, and systemic.”
What Will Happen to CORSIA & Carbon Dioxide Removal?—w/ Lev Gantly, partner at Philip Lee LLP | Reversing Climate Change | 392: What Will Happen to CORSIA & Carbon Dioxide Removal?—w/ Lev Gantly, partner at Philip Lee LLP Reversing Climate Change 1:11:34 |
“Right now, the world’s climate policy architecture is under siege. The US has withdrawn from the Paris Agreement and UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Right-wing populism is rising across Europe. And Europe itself is torn between defending against geopolitical threats and sustaining the climate policies it has spent years building.What happens to carbon removal in this environment? And what happens to CORSIA—The Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation from within the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)—when a key moment of judgment arrives this June?Lev Gantly is a partner at Philip Lee LLP, a law firm specializing in carbon markets and climate law, and one of Reversing Climate Change’s sponsors. He advises a broad range of clients on emissions reduction and carbon dioxide removal projects, both through natural solutions like biochar and engineered technologies.His deep understanding of international carbon markets, Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, and the evolving regulatory landscape makes him a critical voice on where climate policy is actually heading—and where it can actually survive political pressure.Listen in to hear more about how CORSIA works and why it matters (or doesn’t matter so much?) for carbon removal. You’ll also learn about the specific moment this June when the EU must decide whether to keep the scheme or revert to its original plan to impose its own emissions trading system on international aviation.Plus, where Lev is actually seeing durable policy support for carbon removal right now—and what it takes to make climate policy sticky enough to outlast a change in government.”
Frontier: The Private Bet on the Public Good - with Hannah Bebbington Valori | The CDR Policy Scoop | Frontier: The Private Bet on the Public Good - with Hannah Bebbington Valori The CDR Policy Scoop 28:09 |
“In this episode of The CDR Policy Scoop, Sebastian Manhart and Eve Tamme are joined by Hannah Bebbington Valori, Head of Deployment at Frontier, the advanced market commitment backed by Stripe, Alphabet, Shopify, McKinsey, and Meta that has become one of the largest and most experienced buyers of carbon removal in the world.The conversation opens with Frontier’s newly redesigned innovation program, which this year expands beyond pre-purchases to include R&D grants and more flexible check sizes. Hannah explains that roughly 60% of the R&D gaps Frontier identified at launch in 2022 have already been worked on or solved, a sign the field has matured enough to warrant a broader funding approach.Much of the discussion centres on Frontier’s theory of change and the concept of the “baton pass”: The idea that voluntary corporate buyers exist to pull technology from lab to field and prepare a portfolio of proven solutions for governments to eventually take over. Hannah is direct that carbon removal is ultimately a public good requiring government-scale support, and that the voluntary market alone cannot get to gigatons. Sebastian and Eve push on how Frontier engages on policy across jurisdictions, how its buying criteria feed into legislative processes, and the tension between being “tech agnostic” in policy design and the practical pressure to fund what already works.The episode also revisits Frontier’s 2024 fellows program, which placed individuals around the world to build demand for carbon removal through policy. Hannah gives an honest assessment: the Nordic Carbon Removal Alliance was a genuine win, but one year is a short runway for systems change, and policy moves slowly by design. The conversation closes on the question the whole sector is watching, what happens to Frontier after 2030, with Hannah confirming the team is actively working on it.”
Why carbon removal needs a new story | Carbon Curve Podcast The Carbon CurveEpisode 62 is with Robert Höglund (Head of Climate Strategy and CDR, Milky Wire; Co-Founder, CDR FYI; CEO, Marginal Carbon… 5 days ago · 3 likes · Na’im Merchant “In this episode, host Na’im Merchant catches up with Robert Höglund to discuss his latest thinking on the carbon removal sector’s trajectory. Robert makes the case that CDR needs a narrative shift away from speed and scale, toward prove and learn. They explore why aviation and shipping are largely ignoring carbon removal in their decarbonization plans, why voluntary demand may outpace compliance demand for the next decade or more, and why the sector should stop treating CDR as a last resort and start positioning it as a legitimate mitigation solution alongside everything else.”
YOUTUBE VIDEOSDefining “Fishery Sensitive” Marine Carbon Dioxide Removal | Fishery Friendly Climate Action “Fishermen and their representatives have been working through the Fishery Friendly Climate Action Campaign in partnership with the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance (RODA) and three regional coastal/ocean acidification networks to define core principles of “fishery sensitive” marine carbon dioxide removal (mCDR). In this webinar, project partners described a set of 17 fishing industry roundtables that we held on this topic in 2025, and then shared RODA’s new “Guidance for Fishery-Sensitive mCDR” memo series, which was developed by the project partners based on fishermen’s input.”
Puro.earth x Exomad Green: Carbon Markets & Bolivia Visit | Exomad Green “In this episode, Jan-Willem Bode, President of Puro.earth, and Diego Justiniano, CEO of Exomad Green, sit down to discuss the evolution of carbon markets and the growing role of carbon removals.”
The GigaTen Episode #16 March 2026 | Tree+ “Welcome to March and a tragic time of war. In this GigaTen we discuss how doing our daily work helps stay the good course and we survey some of the good news in the CDR sector.”
Sequestering the best outcomes for your carbon credits | Economist Impact Events “Various carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technologies are available, but which one is cost-efficient, impactful, scalable, and less risky? What is the real value proposition? How do you build an impactful strategy for your climate targets? What shall the mix be between carbon credits and removals, permanent and less durable, depending on your company and industry?”
“Direct air capture is becoming a viable option” - Brineworks | gasworld “Gudfinnur Sveinsson, CEO & Co-Founder at Brineworks spoke to gasworld following his presentation at its European CO2 Summit 2026 in Rotterdam.Sveinsson discusses Brineworks direct air capture (DAC) technology and the role it can play in reducing the cost of the historically expensive innovation.He also discusses the objectives of Brineworks, the next steps for the DAC industry and the necessity of e-fuels.”
RepAir Next Generation Electrochemical Technology | RepAir Carbon Capture “Ultra-Efficient Electrochemical Carbon Capture RepAir’s solid-state electrochemical technology revolutionizes carbon capture through a single, continuous process. This breakthrough approach cuts energy consumption by 70% while operating entirely on electricity—no heat, liquids, or solvents required. The system produces 98–99% pure CO₂ ready for permanent storage or utilization and provides solutions for both point-source capture and direct air capture.”
AirMiners: OSCAR - The Open Standard Carbon Removal Agreement | AirMiners “Join AirMiners for a deep dive into OSCAR (Open Standard Carbon Removal Agreement), the open-source legal framework designed to accelerate carbon removal transactions.Contracts have been a major bottleneck in the carbon removal market — every deal requires custom negotiation, slowing adoption and increasing costs. OSCAR changes that by providing a free, standardized template that buyers and suppliers can use immediately.In this 1-hour session, we’ll be joined by the team behind OSCAR to discuss:Why standardized contracts matter for scaling carbon dioxide removal • How OSCAR works and what’s included in the framework • Early adoption and real-world use cases • What this means for buyers, suppliers, and the broader carbon removal market.”
The Climate Goal No One Is Talking About | Foundation for Climate Restoration “Cutting emissions won’t end the climate crisis. There’s already a trillion tons of CO₂ trapped in the atmosphere, and net-zero does nothing to remove it. This video explains what climate restoration is, why the science says it’s achievable by 2050, and how you can be part of the solution.For hundreds of thousands of years, CO₂ never rose above 300 parts per million. Today it’s over 425 ppm. Even if every country hit its net-zero targets tomorrow, that legacy CO₂ keeps heating the planet. Climate restoration is the goal of actually removing it, returning to pre-industrial levels within our lifetime.The Earth has done this before. Scientists have figured out how to replicate those natural processes at scale. What’s missing is public demand. That’s where you come in.”
Scrubbing the Skies: Biodiversity implications of land-intensive carbon dioxide removal | Institute for Responsible Carbon Removal “Decarbonization scenarios heavily rely on land-intensive carbon dioxide removal (CDR) to achieve ambitious climate targets. While carefully designed CDR programs can effectuate sustainable carbon removal, and in some cases environmental co-benefits, large-scale CDR reliance could also pose a critical risk to biodiversity conservation in some regions. Analysing scenario-based land allocation patterns for CDR allows us to scrutinize potential deployment implications and to suggest ways to foster both carbon removal and biodiversity protection.”
Complexity Economics - Financial Market Volatility and Carbon Removal Governance | Instituto de Economia da Unicamp “The seminar concludes by contrasting the mechanical metaphors of 19th-century economics with the Darwinian evolutionary science of the 21st century. Using the computer as a “microscope” for social complexity, the participants argue for a generative approach to economics where macro patterns emerge from the decentralized interactions of diverse, adaptive agents.Closing Insight: The transition toward complexity-based modeling is not merely a technical refinement but an ontological necessity for managing the existential challenges of the modern era.”
Risk, Responsibility, and the Path to Scale for Reforestation Carbon Credits | Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment “Reforestation projects for carbon dioxide removal are deployable at scale today, yet investment remains constrained by risks both real and perceived.New survey research from Stanford’s Sustainability Accelerator and Natural Climate Solutions Initiative reveals that while buyers and sellers could align on price in the $60-90/ton range, fragmented risk perceptions and a lack of consensus on who is responsible for mitigating key risks are blocking deals. In this webinar, we’ll present the key findings and host a panel discussion with Racheal Notto (Kita, a carbon market insurance company), Miguel Moraes (re.green, a reforestation project developer), and Julia Strong (Symbiosis Coalition, an advance market commitment for purchasing nature-based carbon removal) on what it will take to bridge these gaps. We’ll explore how mechanisms like clearer risk allocation frameworks, insurance products, and standardized offtake agreements could convert stated willingness to pay into realized transactions and unlock the next wave of reforestation investment.”
Working Group on carbon sequestration & GHG mitigation -role of restored floodplains as carbon sinks | MedWet - the Mediterranean Wetlands Initiative “This session featured the results of a study to assess the role of restored floodplain grasslands as carbon sinks (considering CO₂ and CH₄), carried out in the Morava River, one of the pilot cases in the Horizon REWET project.”
CUR8 & Microsoft at Goals House in Davos: Deploying a Carbon Removal Playbook at Scale| CUR8 - Carbon Removals “Carbon removal has crossed the threshold from what began as voluntary leadership now to commercial inevitability. We are now in a phase of pre-compliance: standards are crystallising, and the supply of high-integrity removals is tightening faster than most balance sheets are prepared for. For senior leaders, the choice is clear: secure credible terms now or face a later cost shock.Hosted by CUR8 and Microsoft, this will convene the companies that are actively building the market they need to buy from. This discussion will explore the move from carbon removal pilots to portfolios, and how first movers are shaping supply, standards, and financing to their advantage. We will discuss Microsoft’s experience of building an industry leading portfolio to define a scalable playbook for the wider economy and how this market-building logic translates into practical strategies across sectors and balance sheets.”
Engineering Biochar for Carbon-Negative Concrete and Beyond | U Miami Civil and Architectural Engineering Weekly Carbon Removal Updates from 23 March - 29 March 2026 | Carbon Removal Updates Bulletin DEADLINESFollow us on:Twitter | Bluesky | LinkedIn | YouTube | Substack | Podcast 1 | Podcast 2
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