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Singapore is building world’s largest facility to suck carbon from the sea

#2390 of 2543 articles from the Special Report: Race Against Climate Change
The ocean stores much of the emissions released by human activities, but it is reaching a tipping point, research shows. Photo by Ronnie Robertson/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0 Deed)

This story was originally published by Inside Climate News and appears here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

The ocean is quite literally a massive sink for carbon. Research shows that this body of water has absorbed more than a quarter of all carbon dioxide pollution that humans have pumped into the sky, helping to prevent more catastrophic impacts from climate change than the ones humanity is already experiencing.

However, scientists have found that even the ocean is reaching its limit, and could become only half as efficient at sucking in carbon by 2300 due to extreme warming and acidification. But a growing number of startups, including Captura and Running Tide, have pledged to help lighten the ocean’s carbon load by using technology to suck the greenhouse gas directly from seawater.

In one of the biggest efforts yet, carbon removal company Equatic and Singapore’s national water agency PUB announced that they have set out to build the world’s largest ocean-based carbon removal plant. Last year, the company — owned and run by scientists from the University of California, Los Angeles — developed two proof-of-concept pilots in L.A. and Singapore, which successfully extracted around 100 kilograms (0.1 tons) of carbon dioxide each day.

Now, their goal is to develop a $20-million plant that removes 3,650 metric tons (4,000 tons) of the gas from the ocean annually, according to a UCLA press release.

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How does it work?

In the “Equatic process,” operators start by running an electrical current through seawater pumped into the facility. This charge separates water (H2O) into hydrogen and oxygen, and then air is passed through the water, which traps and stores CO2 in solid calcium and magnesium-based materials “similar to how seashells are naturally formed,” reported Time, which named Equatic as one of the “Best Inventions of 2023.” Removing carbon from the water enables the ocean to absorb more carbon from the air, the company says. In addition to storing CO2, the company plans to use the hydrogen byproduct as an ingredient in clean fuel, according to the statement. Other companies have been testing different processes to suck carbon from seawater, which my colleague Ananya Chetia wrote about last year.

But does it work?

Technically yes, but the scalability of this seemingly magical process of sucking carbon from the air or sea has been met with widespread skepticism by scientists. More than 200 experts signed a letter in September outlining their concerns:

“While ocean-based carbon dioxide removal approaches have enormous potential, there are also risks,” they wrote. “Society does not yet have nearly enough information about the effectiveness or impacts of any specific approach and so cannot make informed decisions about their use at scale.”

Last May, a UN panel called the carbon capture industry “unproven,” with “unknown” risks, and questioned its economic viability due to high operating costs. But the U.S. government is certainly making big bets on research that will help enhance the ocean’s ability to remove carbon from the atmosphere. In October, the Department of Energy (DOE) allocated $36 million in funding to “advance marine carbon dioxide removal techniques” (Equatic is not part of this initiative, but has received funding from the DOE). The National Science Foundation took the first steps toward launching a federal research program to investigate different techniques such as using “minerals and electricity to change the alkalinity of the oceans to allow seawater to absorb more CO2 from the air,” E&E News covered.

Many experts agree that carbon capture is going to be necessary to meet climate goals. The new Equatic plant is a “significant part of Singapore’s goal to reach net-zero emissions by 2045,” writes Koh Ewe for Time. If the plant meets its expected output, the company plans to scale up at a commercial level, and has already entered agreements with other businesses, including Boeing, to purchase carbon credits — a practice that has also faced its fair share of controversy, as my colleagues have explored several times in the past.

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