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South Pole, Mitsubishi eye up to $800 mln of carbon removal credits by 2030

by Reuters
Friday, 7 May 2021 09:57 GMT

FILE PHOTO: A pipe for transporting carbon dioxide to removal equipment is shown at the Tomakomai carbon, capture and storage (CCS) test site in Tomakomai, Hokkaido prefecture, Japan March 22, 2018. REUTERS/Aaron Sheldrick

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The new facility aims to provide a secure revenue stream for costly new carbon removal technologies to accelerate their development

 - Swiss company South Pole is developing a carbon removal purchase facility with Japan's Mitsubishi Corp which aims to procure $300 million to $800 million worth of carbon dioxide (CO2) removal credits by 2030, South Pole said on Friday.

More than 190 countries have signed up to the Paris climate agreement designed to limit global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius, but even with pledges of huge reductions in emissions many scientists believe technology to remove CO2 from the atmosphere will also be needed to meet the goal.

The early stage technology is expensive and while many countries around the world have schemes in place to put a price on CO2 emissions, the prices are far too low to incentivise removal technology, carbon offset project developer South Pole and Mitsubishi said. 

The new facility "will provide a secure revenue stream for new carbon removal technologies to accelerate their development. Importantly, it will help drive down the price per ton of CO2 removed over time," said Patrick Burgi, co-founder and director of innovation at South Pole.

Current removal technology costs can range from $50 to $400 a ton, he said.

Many companies have set net zero emissions targets which will require them to purchase carbon offset credits to compensate for the emissions they are unable to cut themselves.

Carbon offsets credits on the CME exchange are trading just above $2 a tonne, but some companies, such as Microsoft, have said they will invest in the more expensive removal offsets such as direct air capture to help reach their climate targets.

Burgi said buyers could expect to pay around $50-100 per ton for its credits and that South Pole is in advanced discussions with three initial buyers.

($1 = 0.8303 euros)

(Reporting By Susanna Twidale; editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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