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The 2nd Edition of State of Carbon Dioxide Removal report has identified a subset of scenarios that can be considered “more sustainable” to meet the 1.5°C Paris Agreement target , including that the central range of Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) deployment is 7 to 9 GtCO₂ per year in 2050.
Currently just 2 billion tons per year are being removed by CDR, mostly through conventional methods like tree planting. Novel CDR methods – like biochar, enhanced rock weathering, direct air carbon capture and storage (DACCS) and bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) – contribute 1.3 million tons per year, less than 0.1% of the total. Methods which are effectively permanent account for only 0.6 million tons per year – less than 0.05% of the total.
The report urged governments to implement policies that will increase demand for carbon removals.
The authors of the 2024 State of Carbon Dioxide Removal report – co-led by researchers at the University of Oxford – stressed that reducing emissions is the primary way to achieve net-zero, but CDR has a critical role to play.
A diverse range of CDR methods must be rapidly scaled up to address climate change in line with the Paris Agreement, said the authors. CDR has undergone rapid growth in research, public awareness and start-up companies. Yet there are now signs of a slowdown in development across multiple indicators.
While investment in CDR research and start-ups is going to an increasing variety of novel methods, few of these methods are currently targeted in government policies and proposals to scale CDR, which accounts for just 1.1% of investment in climate-tech start-ups. ‘Given the world is off track from the decarbonization required to meet the Paris temperature goal, this shows the need to increase investment in CDR as well as for zero-emission solutions across the board,’ said Dr Steve Smith of the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, University of Oxford.
The report noted that CDR companies have high ambitions which, taken together, would drive CDR to levels consistent with meeting the temperature goal of the Paris Agreement. However, the authors said these ambitions have little ground for credibility at present and depend on a much stronger set of policies than currently exists.
These should include the embedding of CDR policies into countries’ Nationally Determined Contributions (climate action plans under the UNFCCC) and developing better monitoring, reporting and verification systems for CDR. At present, much of the demand for CDR is coming from voluntary commitments by companies to buy carbon removal credits.
Dr Steve Smith, Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, commented “‘”There are some encouraging signs in the growth and diversity of CDR research and innovations. But these are tempered strongly by sparse and precarious long-term demand. Governments have a decisive role to play now in creating the conditions for CDR to scale sustainably.”
Dr Oliver Geden, German Institute for International and Security Affairs, said “Deploying a diverse CDR portfolio is a more robust strategy than focusing on just one or two methods. Research, invention, and investment in start-ups show diversification across CDR methods. However, current deployment and government proposals for future implementation are more concentrated on conventional CDR, mainly from forestry.”
Matthew J. Gidden, Senior Scholar, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, IIASA, said “It is clear that delaying crucial emissions reductions only exacerbates needed mitigation in the future to limit warming well below 2°C, but there are limits to the role sustainable CDR can play the longer the world delays.”
Dr. Stephanie Roe, Global Climate and Energy Lead Scientist, WWF, highlighted that “To meet the Paris Agreement, any kind of climate mitigation must be done sustainably. This report finds that the more sustainable scenarios have higher amounts of emissions reductions and therefore deploy less CDR cumulatively. For the CDR that is needed, it is vital that environmental and social sustainability are explicitly embedded into planning and policy to minimize risks and maximize co-benefits.”
This annual report is a combined effort of over 50 international experts. It is the world-leading scientific assessment of how much carbon dioxide removal will be needed to limit climate change, and whether or not the world is on track to deliver.
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