Direct Carbon Removal: The World’s Largest Plant Comes to Life in Quebec, Canada

Canada constructs the largest CO2 extraction plant in the world

In Quebec, Canada, a groundbreaking direct carbon removal (CDR) plant is under construction. Equatic, the company behind this project, aims to enhance the ocean’s role as a carbon sink and reduce the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. The world’s largest CDR plant, capable of removing over 109,000 tons of CO2 annually, is expected to be operational later this year.

Equatic’s approach to CDR involves running an electric current through seawater and splitting it into hydrogen and oxygen. The process produces an acid and a base as byproducts. The alkaline water created is then used to absorb additional carbon from the atmosphere through cooling towers. The hydrogen generated can be sold or used to power the facility, making the process self-sustaining.

The plant being built in Singapore is expected to handle 4,000 tonnes of CO2 when operational, with Equatic’s commercial-scale project in Quebec aiming to handle 109,500 tonnes of CO2 and produce 3,600 tonnes of green hydrogen annually. The company estimates an energy requirement of less than 1.4 MW per tonne of CO2 removed.

Oceans are crucial carbon absorbers that remove up to 25% of human-emitted carbon each year. Replicating Equatic’s technology on a larger scale could potentially remove billions of tons of CO2 from the atmosphere, helping in the fight against climate change. The cost-effective method may bring the price of carbon removal down to as low as $100 per ton by the end of the decade.

Equatic ensures that their Singapore plant will include a seawater desalination system to filter out marine life before processing their innovative technology that represents the world’s first commercial-scale implementation of direct carbon removal, offering a promising solution to mitigate climate change impacts.

Leave a Reply