
November 15, 2023
BY U.S. Department of Energy
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Deep Sky has issued North America's first independently certified direct air capture carbon removal credits from its Alberta facility. The credits, verified by Isometric and purchased by Microsoft and RBC, represent a milestone for the commercial deployment of durable carbon removal technology in the region.
Frontier announced $915 million in new funding for carbon removal technologies, increasing its total commitment to $1.8 billion. The group plans to concentrate investments on a smaller number of high-potential projects and help scale technologies such as ocean alkalinity enhancement, enhanced rock weathering and direct air capture. Frontier says stronger corporate purchasing and government policies will be critical to building a carbon removal industry capable of operating at gigaton scale.
KBR's PureSAF technology has been selected by NorSAF for a sustainable aviation fuel and e-SAF production facility in Latvia that is expected to become the largest of its kind in Northern Europe. The plant is planned to produce 100,000 tons of fuel annually beginning in 2030.
Mazda successfully demonstrated onboard CO₂ capture and storage during the Super Taikyu Series 2026, capturing 804 grams of CO₂ over a 24-hour race. The achievement marks a significant step toward practical application of the technology and Mazda’s goal of realizing carbon-negative mobility by 2035.
Aalborg Portland has signed an agreement with the Danish Energy Agency to receive a carbon capture subsidy of up to approximately EUR 2.2 billion over 15 years for its ACCSION carbon capture and storage project. The project is expected to capture up to 1.25 million tons of CO₂ annually from 2030 and represents a major step in Cementir Holding’s path toward net-zero emissions.