The Prague Post - Rapid scale-up of CO2 removal crucial for climate goals

EUR -
AED 4.303781
AFN 72.657362
ALL 95.390947
AMD 435.067491
ANG 2.097553
AOA 1075.797522
ARS 1638.885486
AUD 1.637271
AWG 2.109408
AZN 1.988412
BAM 1.955205
BBD 2.356482
BDT 143.556277
BGN 1.954837
BHD 0.442448
BIF 3480.140051
BMD 1.171893
BND 1.494545
BOB 8.084538
BRL 5.846927
BSD 1.169944
BTN 110.206434
BWP 15.847173
BYN 3.314291
BYR 22969.104282
BZD 2.353083
CAD 1.601386
CDF 2712.932841
CHF 0.920534
CLF 0.026697
CLP 1050.73097
CNY 8.011415
CNH 8.005225
COP 4165.939257
CRC 532.437835
CUC 1.171893
CUP 31.055167
CVE 110.231427
CZK 24.358853
DJF 208.346544
DKK 7.472858
DOP 69.698772
DZD 155.257643
EGP 61.762289
ERN 17.578396
ETB 180.868513
FJD 2.575646
FKP 0.866005
GBP 0.866322
GEL 3.140721
GGP 0.866005
GHS 12.989044
GIP 0.866005
GMD 86.135576
GNF 10269.872097
GTQ 8.944276
GYD 244.775449
HKD 9.183259
HNL 31.089531
HRK 7.532576
HTG 153.173348
HUF 364.200855
IDR 20202.792082
ILS 3.505115
IMP 0.866005
INR 110.457831
IQD 1532.633205
IRR 1543383.181132
ISK 143.80305
JEP 0.866005
JMD 184.633766
JOD 0.830859
JPY 186.875881
KES 151.584441
KGS 102.427203
KHR 4687.572673
KMF 492.195072
KPW 1054.703723
KRW 1726.233652
KWD 0.360673
KYD 0.975003
KZT 543.474474
LAK 25637.191661
LBP 104770.68991
LKR 372.936414
LRD 214.684613
LSL 19.454975
LTL 3.460295
LVL 0.708866
LYD 7.423739
MAD 10.824703
MDL 20.345803
MGA 4861.519323
MKD 61.599956
MMK 2461.220499
MNT 4192.014232
MOP 9.441624
MRU 46.695778
MUR 54.73034
MVR 18.106209
MWK 2028.782092
MXN 20.388477
MYR 4.63308
MZN 74.896027
NAD 19.454975
NGN 1584.692287
NIO 43.056886
NOK 10.904506
NPR 176.330295
NZD 1.993232
OMR 0.450574
PAB 1.169944
PEN 4.056465
PGK 5.078453
PHP 71.163263
PKR 326.158062
PLN 4.244304
PYG 7418.740468
QAR 4.265001
RON 5.090349
RSD 117.379145
RUB 88.188365
RWF 1710.07916
SAR 4.39421
SBD 9.42824
SCR 17.442999
SDG 703.684922
SEK 10.814288
SGD 1.494644
SHP 0.874937
SLE 28.857858
SLL 24574.007356
SOS 668.596365
SRD 43.903214
STD 24255.820623
STN 24.49254
SVC 10.236882
SYP 129.523468
SZL 19.447077
THB 37.929466
TJS 10.99775
TMT 4.107485
TND 3.416459
TOP 2.821637
TRY 52.774587
TTD 7.94558
TWD 36.842563
TZS 3064.499916
UAH 51.554698
UGX 4352.674303
USD 1.171893
UYU 46.345884
UZS 14056.718734
VES 566.21732
VND 30889.92958
VUV 137.766153
WST 3.197518
XAF 655.757275
XAG 0.015483
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.167099
XCG 2.108558
XDR 0.815552
XOF 655.757275
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.672295
ZAR 19.394889
ZMK 10548.444203
ZMW 22.141256
ZWL 377.349092
  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.32

    +0.39%

  • BCC

    0.3300

    84.15

    +0.39%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    87.42

    +0.53%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    36.53

    +1.09%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    23.88

    -0.92%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.95

    +0.17%

  • RIO

    0.7600

    99.61

    +0.76%

  • GSK

    -1.1900

    54.44

    -2.19%

  • RBGPF

    64.0000

    64

    +100%

  • AZN

    -2.5500

    189.75

    -1.34%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.89

    +0.08%

  • BP

    -0.1000

    46.25

    -0.22%

  • BTI

    0.8100

    58.09

    +1.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    15.3

    -0.78%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    15.63

    +0.06%

Rapid scale-up of CO2 removal crucial for climate goals
Rapid scale-up of CO2 removal crucial for climate goals / Photo: Halldor KOLBEINS - AFP/File

Rapid scale-up of CO2 removal crucial for climate goals

Capping global warming at liveable levels will be impossible without massively scaling up the extraction of planet-warming carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, the first global assessment of CO2 removal warned Thursday.

Text size:

The persistent failure to draw down greenhouse gas emissions -- nearly 60 billion tonnes a year of CO2 or its equivalent -- has forced once-marginal carbon dioxide removal (CDR) options toward centre stage in climate policy, investment and research.

Across methods ranging from tree planting to factory-sized machines that suck CO2 from the air and store it underground, CDR worldwide currently captures two billion tonnes of the gas each year, according to the State of Carbon Dioxide Report.

More than 99 percent is extracted through "conventional" techniques such as restoring and expanding CO2-absorbing forests and wetlands.

Only a tiny fraction -- about 0.1 percent -- is removed by "novel" technologies such as direct air capture, converting organic waste into rock-like biochar, or capturing the CO2 from plants grown and burned for fuel, more than two dozen experts concluded.

The UN's climate science advisory body, the IPCC, has said carbon emissions must decline some 45 percent compared to 2020 levels by the end of this decade, and to net zero by mid-century, if Paris Agreement goals are to be met.

The 2015 treaty enjoins nations to hold warming to "well below" two degrees Celsius compared to preindustrial levels. The IPCC later concluded that only the agreement's aspirational 1.5C target could prevent severe, and potentially catastrophic, climate impacts.

"Regardless of whether we do a little or a lot of carbon dioxide removal, we will still have to do massive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions," report co-author Gregory Nemet, a professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, told AFP.

But CO2 emissions in 2022 remained at near-record levels, thrusting CDR into an even more critical role.

By the end of the century, the report calculates for the first time, CDR must extract between 450 billion and 1.1 trillion tonnes of CO2.

The new report says that conventional, tree-planting CDR -- even if emissions do drop sharply -- must double by 2050 to keep the 1.5C target in play, and increase by 50 percent to hold warming under 2C.

- Scaling up massively -

Research, however, has shown that food, energy and climate needs could result in competition for land, even with efficiency gains in each sector.

A deeply changing climate with only 1.2C of warming to date could also limit potential.

"If warming continues -- and all signs say it will -- then it will be even harder to maintain current levels of conventional CDR because they will be affected by droughts, storms, pests and other impacts," said co-author Oliver Geden, a senior fellow at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs and an IPCC lead author.

That means novel CDR methods have to pick up the slack.

To keep warming under 2C, deployment of these nascent technologies must be ramped up 30-fold by 2030, and by more than 1,000-fold by 2100, according to the report, led by the University of Oxford.

The 1.5C target would require scaling up even faster.

"Many policymakers don't know -- and probably don't want to know -- how much keeping the 1.5C narrative alive actually depends on carbon dioxide removal," Geden told AFP.

One novel CDR technology has attracted more attention -- and money -- than any other, even if it has barely put a dent in global emissions: direct air capture combined with carbon storage (DACCS).

Three quarters of the $200 million (185 million euros) invested in new CDR capacity from 2020 to 2022 went to direct air capture -- a big chunk of it to Switzerland-based Climeworks. The firm announced last week the world's first certified CO2 removal and storage on behalf of paying clients, including Microsoft and software service company Stripe.

"All this investment is based on the assumption that direct air capture can grow from about 10,000 tonnes today to a billion tonnes by 2050" -- a 100,000-fold increase, said Nemet.

That rate of growth is not necessarily out of reach, he said.

In earlier research, Nemet compiled a database of 135 technologies that emerged over the last century, looking at how quickly they scaled up.

The growth rate for solar panels has been about 30 percent a year over 30 years, he found.

"Direct air capture needs to be more than 40 percent for the next 30 years," he said. "It's a huge challenge, but it's not unprecedented."

J.Marek--TPP