The Scale of the Problem
Carbon removal is any process that physically extracts CO2 from the atmosphere and stores it in a durable form. The IPCC estimates that limiting warming to 1.5°C requires 6 to 10 billion tonnes of CO2 removal per year by 2050. Current deployment stands at roughly 8 million tonnes per year. That is a 1,000x gap between what exists and what the science says is necessary.
This is not a theoretical requirement. Emission reductions alone are no longer sufficient because the atmosphere already contains more CO2 than is compatible with stable climate outcomes. Even if global emissions dropped to zero tomorrow, the legacy stock of atmospheric CO2 would continue driving warming for decades. Removal addresses the stock, not just the flow.
The gap is enormous, but the trajectory is moving in the right direction. Durable carbon dioxide removal (CDR) purchases grew 78% year-on-year in 2024, reaching approximately 8 million tonnes. The voluntary carbon market is restructuring around quality and permanence. Corporate procurement is shifting from cheap avoidance offsets to verified physical removal. Policy frameworks like the EU Carbon Removal Certification Framework (CRCF) and the US 45Q tax credit are creating compliance demand alongside voluntary purchasing.
The economics are still challenging. The cheapest durable removal method, biochar, costs $131-164 per tonne of CO2 removed. The most engineered approach, direct air capture with geological storage, costs $400-600+ per tonne. Scaling from 8 million to 8 billion tonnes per year at these prices is not currently affordable. But every carbon removal technology follows a cost learning curve, and every doubling of deployment drives costs down. The question is not whether removal will scale. It is which methods will scale first and which price trajectories are steepest.