In order to head off the worst consequences of climate change, it's too late to
simply keep reducing or even eliminating carbon
emissions.
While absolutely essential, that is no longer enough. Even if we could eliminate
all emissions by 2050 — which is extremely unlikely — that would not limit
climate change to the necessary levels put forth in the Paris Agreement.
To bring the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere down to safe levels, we
need to dramatically reduce emissions and actively pull carbon out of the
atmosphere and keep it out for as long as possible.
Think of the problem of excess carbon in the atmosphere as analogous to a
bathtub that is overflowing and never empties. There are inflows of water, which
are emissions flowing into the atmosphere, and outflows as water spills over the
side — emissions being removed from the atmosphere. Reductions (and avoidances)
are those solutions that reduce inflows — essentially turning the faucet down.
These could be efficiency improvements, electrification, switching to
renewables,
the cessation of polluting activities, and the protection of natural systems.
Ultimately, we need the water in the tub to get lower and achieve a certain
equilibrium. This means that we need to find a way to get a lot of the water out
and prevent it from filling up again.
In this context, removal means either storing emissions underground — absorbing
them into natural systems such as trees or embedding them into something that
will last a good while. According to one scientific
model,
roughly 33 gigatons of CO2 equivalent need to be removed each year going forward
to keep warming below 2 degrees fahrenheit. As you might have guessed, we're not
anywhere near being able to do that yet; though there are pathways
emerging
that could get us there.
We are at the very beginning of the most challenging leg of the climate journey;
many companies have yet to commit to zeroing out their
emissions. Still,
there are a few at the cutting edge that are responding to the call for a higher
bar to be set and are staking their reputations on achieving it.
Erin Meezan is VP and Chief Sustainability Officer at Interface
Inc — a maker of carpet tiles and other flooring
products. By now, most are familiar with Interface’s sustainability leadership
and
legacy.
Since1994, the company has reduced the carbon intensity of its business by 96
percent (blowing past an 80 percent goal along the way) while reducing the
carbon footprint of its entire product portfolio to zero. And back in 2016, when
few companies were even talking about going carbon neutral, Interface pledged
that it would be carbon negative by
2040.
When asked about Interface’s journey, Meezan responded that she was quite sure
that they weren’t the only ones on it. Yet all the companies who have made
similar pledges are in a place where they are thinking, "Okay, we've made the
commitment — now, what do we do?"
"As a company who has been a pioneer and taken its whole product portfolio to carbon neutral, we definitely feel like we need to take that next hill — which
means [going] carbon negative,” she said. “So, we've made a public
carbon-negative commitment.
“We've done an analysis and then shared publicly our full carbon liability,
including scope
3.
That serves as a starting point to give us a number that we have [to exceed] in
order to go negative. We have begun plotting that number against what we can do
[internally]. What it has meant for us is a fundamentally different approach to
product, going from this idea of trying to make our supply chain more efficient
and give us low-carbon materials, to new material innovation boosting a lot more
and different biomaterials that go into our products to actually make them store
carbon."
As a first major step on this path to negative carbon emissions, Interface just
announced a series of carbon-negative carpet tile backings called
CQuest
(as in "sequester"). The use of certain qualified biomaterials, combined with
specialty yarns and proprietary tufting processes, results in a carpet tile that
— when measured cradle to gate — pulls more carbon out of the air than was used
to produce it. It's worth pointing out that Interface was able to achieve this
entirely within its own design, production and supply chain operations, without
relying on any form of offsets. But the company will be the first to acknowledge
that not every business can do this.
Meezan told us: "We're just in the early days; and the ones that we just
launched are carbon negative by the hair of their chinny-chin-chin. So, we know
we can do more as we work on product formulation, dematerialization, and more
efficient manufacturing to make the product more negative."
It’s clear that there is no single path to negative carbon emissions. Depending
on the nature of the business, some companies — primarily manufacturers — will
have the opportunity to incorporate carbon-storing materials into their
products. Other sectors will have to seek options outside of their own
operations. But even among those that produce goods, many will not be able to
offset their entire footprint through product reformulation.
Meezan acknowledges that. "Even the combined work of storing carbon in the
factories and in products is not going to get us to the full carbon liability
that we have as a business. So, we’re going to have to do something else that
balances the rest of that out. We just can’t get enough [carbon-negative]
materials into the product to offset the whole piece. And I expect that's where
a lot of companies will be."
Interface’s plan is similar to its strategy for going carbon neutral. It
consists of three phases: First, measure and understand the full scope of the
company’s carbon footprint. Second, look at what reductions and removals might
be achieved within the product formulation and within the business and supply
chain. Finally, address the remainder through investments in legitimate,
verified
activities
outside of the business to bring the overall footprint to below zero.
While that third category sounds a lot like what is happening right now in the
offset
market,
there are key differences. For one thing, getting to carbon negative requires
removal offsets, which are different from reduction offsets — "because, no
matter how hard you try, you can't reduce your way to negative," Meezan pointed
out.
This is an important point. Carbon removal is the process of removing carbon
that has already been emitted from the air.
We already have natural mechanisms that remove carbon — such as nature-based
solutions, including forests, mangroves and wetlands that must be preserved and
protected. We also have the possibility of dramatically lowering the emissions
during farming through regenerative
agriculture
— that, for example, uses low tilling techniques that prevent carbon dioxide
from being released from the soil.
There are also a growing number of technology-based removal solutions, such as
direct air capture and the development of durable products (such as cement or
steel) that incorporate CO2 into their structure. These are analogous to opening
the drain in the tub.
It's also important to note that as the IPCC has
stated, our existing outflows — which primarily come from forests and wetlands,
which are themselves diminishing — not only need to be protected, they must also
be supplemented with additional capacity for carbon removal.
So, how can companies get access to carbon-removal technologies in order to
reach net zero? Today, the most direct way is to support removal projects is
through carbon finance — i.e. investing in carbon
credits.
This will funnel much-needed financing directly to projects and technologies
that need it to get off the ground.
The carbon-removal credit market is in its very early
days
and there are some early-stage solutions out there. Nori
launched a carbon-removal market based on Etherium, focusing initially on
regenerative agriculture. Puro.earth is another.
Shopify
has purchased 15,000 tons of direct air capture from Climeworks and Carbon
Engineering, which was arranged through a request for proposals (RFP). United
Airlines recently
announced its intention to invest in direct air-capture technology to offset the
impact of its flights. There are also nature-based carbon-offset programs
available today that involve some degree of removal — primarily
biochar
and
reforestation
programs.
Biochar played a role in
Microsoft's
purchase last year of 1.3 million metric tons of carbon from 15 suppliers across
26 projects around the world. Microsoft is also in a partnership on bioenergy
with carbon capture (BECCS) with
Chevron.
Meanwhile, IKEA decided
to buy a
forest
— or actually, several — adding up to over 600,000 acres in the US and
Europe that are now protected from development.
These are all good things, but we need a lot more. In order to get a lot more,
we need a robust carbon-removal market if we are going to meet the Paris
targets.
Yet, Meezan says, “It took the voluntary carbon market a long time to get to a
place where we felt like there were clear standards for unregulated carbon
offsets — whether that's the voluntary carbon standard
[Verra], or the stakeholder approach, etc. That took 15 or
20 years. We do not have time to wait 15 or 20 years for the voluntary market to
decide what is a credible ton of carbon removed from the atmosphere."
As Noah Deich, founder and President of Carbon180,
puts it, "It's the Wild West right now. There is no clear standard for what a
carbon removal credit is."
While there are a number of carbon-removal actions being put forward as
solutions — such as forestry, agriculture, cement, direct air capture,
carpeting, etc — there isn’t a standards body to set a universally accepted way
to compare all the different types of carbon-removal pathways.
This lack of uniformity has led to a situation where voluntary offsets can be
found at prices that are quite low today, while direct air-capture credits can
run as much as a hundred times higher — which is too high for the market, though
it will likely come down in time. So, right now the only affordable solutions
are nature-based removal projects.
Deich thinks that since no government will tell companies to go negative anytime
soon, climate action in removals is going to remain voluntary. And that we need
to manage our expectations, "until it becomes incredibly cheap or until the
government says 'you have to do it — and here are the standards that apply.'"
While Deich might sound pessimistic, he isn't. He just doesn't think that the
private sector can do it alone.
So, what’s needed in order to make carbon removal a business standard? We need
more science-based solutions — both in terms of new and lower cost ways of
removing large-scale volumes of carbon, as well as better methods of measuring
carbon removal. Clear standards and regulations are also needed along with
incentives — whether that be in the form of grants, tax credits or a higher
price on carbon.
Deich agrees, and then adds that all of these can be achieved through government
action. Policy would facilitate things innovation programs along the lines of
the National Academies’ Energy Futures
Initiative. Infrastructure, including a
network of CO2 pipelines and storage hubs, should be built. Additional demand
incentives, such as expanding on the 45Q
credit
in last year's government budget that was specifically targeted at point-source
capture at mature industrial sites (with that credit, manufacturers can earn
$50 per metric ton of CO2 captured and stored permanently or $35 if the CO2 is
used, such as for enhanced oil recovery [EOR]) should be offered. The government
could also set standards for everything from carbon accounting to safely
injecting CO2 underground.
"Far and away the best dollar a corporate can spend on this right now in this
space is actively lobbying for climate
action
at the Federal and State levels," Deich says. That would create a huge return,
since the government can fund all that science and innovation and set standards,
etc. Those are the types of activities that are too expensive for individual
companies to fund but are pre-competitive, so they benefits any company that
wants them." Carbon180’s full plan can be found in their Transition
Book.
To reach that desired state, we'll need more clarity on what is and isn’t carbon
removal; and what the important differences are between one type and another.
There are a range of criteria that need to be accounted for, such as the fact
that solutions operate on different timescales. One type of removal, such as the
installation of DAC machinery, while expensive can remove large amounts of
carbon from day one, while planting a new forest — a much cheaper solution —
removes carbon more slowly.
The good news is that early adopter companies are already solving for net
zero and
solutions
are being worked on. With a supportive administration in Washington, DC, we can be
optimistic that a rapid expansion of carbon removal will soon take place. What's
less clear is the specific form that all these changes will take.
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Published May 3, 2021 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST