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.
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.
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."
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© Agence France-Presse
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