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Direct Air Carbon Capture and Storage (DACCS)

Promises

  • Direct Air CO₂ Capture and Storage (DACCS) is a technology that uses chemical processes to capture and separate CO₂ directly from ambient air. The CO₂ is then stored underground in geological reservoirs, which removes the CO₂ for more than 1000 years.
  • DACCS has the potential to remove 5–40 giga tons CO₂ per year, potentially the largest of any form of CO₂ removal technology, at an estimated cost of $US 100–300 per ton of CO₂.

Opportunities

The most representative example of CDR applications comes from the Swiss start-up Climeworks. Their technology utilises large fans to pull in ambient air through filters that capture CO₂ molecules. Once captured, the CO₂ is mineralised by injecting it deep underground into basaltic rock formations. This way the CO₂ is securely stored, significantly reducing atmospheric CO₂ levels, all while utilising renewable energy or waste heat as energy sources for the capture process. The Climework Carbon Capture plant ORCA (in Iceland) started operating at the end of 2021 and targets to capture 4.000 tons of CO₂ per year.

Concerns

  • DACCS is very expensive per unit CO₂ removed. As a result, it is mostly available to large corporations. Fossil fuel companies are often the ones who control the projects. How can we ensure DACCS is used where it is most needed, rather than allowing big emitters to evade responsibility?
  • How can we ensure that big emitters are held accountable for their actions and that paying for CE technologies development and implementation does not absolve them of their responsibility?

Boundaries

  • The primary barriers to DACCS include high economic costs and large non-fossil energy requirements, rather than potential risks or side-effects of implementation. Economic costs would fall through investment.