Displaying 1 - 25 of 53
1
Article
The deal with Chestnut Carbon covers the removal of 2.7 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere over 15 years to support Microsoft's climate ambitions.
by Stuart Stone
2
Article
The EPA is promoting carbon capture and storage tech to cap emissions from fossil fuel-powered utilities.
by Leah Garden
3
Article
Avoided deforestation credits represent a reality that doesn’t exist. Removing them from net-zero strategies, while still funding them under a different scheme, can avoid this problem.
by Jesse Klein
4
Article
There is continued confusion over guidance on the role protecting forests should play on a company’s road to net zero.
5
Article
Icelandic company Carbfix has cracked the code on converting liquified CO2 into rock, leading the charge to capture and store excess carbon.
by Leah Garden
6
Article
Sponsored: The science is clear: Companies must aggressively decarbonize their business and invest in nature to stop the worst impacts of climate change.
7
Article
Launched by Stripe this spring, Frontier has announced its first six project winners: AspiraDAC (a subsidiary of Corporate Carbon), Calcite-Origen (a collaboration between 8 Rivers and Origen), Lithos, RepAir, Travertine and Living Carbon.
by Leah Garden
8
Article
This carbon removal technology is gaining traction beyond the farm world, where it has been well known for decades.
by Jesse Klein
9
Article
Tech startup Pachama gets $55 million to scale digital verification of forest carbon projects.
10
Article
Sponsored: The new Sustainable Forestry Initiative 2022 standards will ensure healthy forests that lead to benefits such as avoiding deforestation and fighting climate change.
11
Article
Their mission: connect heavy emitters to CO2 conversion centers where emissions will be recycled into usable products and to storage infrastructure such as injection wells.
by Camille Bond
12
Article
Sponsored: Carbon removal is an important and immediate part of the many actions companies are taking to reach the aims of the Paris Agreement.
13
Article
Startups are helping legacy brands address their carbon emissions at scale.
by Ben Soltoff
14
Article
Corporate demand for carbon removal options is growing more quickly than supply. Developing a ‘quality’ market will take standards, regulations, investments and transparency.
by Meg Wilcox
15
Article
Natural climate solutions offer us up to one-third of the solutions required to meet the climate change goals by 2030. The Natural Climate Solutions Alliance offers valuable guidance for businesses looking to invest.
by Justin Adams
16
Article
TNFD co-chair and Refinitiv CEO David Craig chats about the daunting task of drawing up nature-related risk disclosure guidelines.
17
Article
Using captured CO₂ in everyday products could help fight climate change, but will consumers want them?
18
Article
Confusing guidelines, the lack of standardized metrics, and little funding has left one of our most valuable climate mitigation tools untapped.
by Manish Bapna
19
Article
Across the 48 states of the continental U.S., there is enough land to plant forests that could sequester the equivalent of about 5 percent of the greenhouse gases the country emitted in 2019.
20
Article
Keeping trees in the ground where they are already growing is an effective low-tech way to slow climate change.
by Beverly Law
21
To fix fashion’s sustainability problem, we need a little less conversation and a little more action
Article
Sponsored: The industry is on the verge of a climate revolution, but progress is getting bogged down by semantics and distracted by low-hanging fruit.
by Angela Adams
22
Article
The grass has a bad rap in the U.S. as an invasive nuisance, but the plant can quickly sequester at least double the amount of carbon as a similar stand of trees.
by Audrey Gray
23
Article
Sponsored: Dow and Restore the Earth Foundation explore how science, shared values and nature-based solutions can unlock environmental and economic value in climate partnerships.
24
Article
Until recently, the concept of blue carbon attracted little attention outside academic and think-tank circles. We may be at a turning point, thanks to the actions of some forward-thinking businesses.
by Jim Giles
25
Article
Here’s a snapshot of five organizations pioneering new processes that use carbon dioxide as a feedstock for products ranging from fuel to concrete.