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Canadian company produces first direct air capture Carbon Credits in North America

Canadian company produces first direct air capture Carbon Credits in North America
Canadian company produces first direct air capture Carbon Credits in North America

Canada's Deep Ski?became a first North American company to provide verified carbon removing credits?from direct air capture. It announced on Monday that it had provided credits to Microsoft Canada and Royal Bank of Canada.

DAC is different from carbon capture and storage, which stores CO2 before it reaches our atmosphere. DAC cleans up existing emissions by removing carbon from the air.

Deep Sky CEO, Alex?Petre, said in an interview that "this shows Canada is building and taking risks.?And it puts us at the forefront of innovation in carbon removal." Climeworks is the only company to have generated DAC credits. Their Iceland facility is also the largest DAC complex in the world.

Scientists have stated that DAC is crucial to stabilizing climate. However, the technology is costly and difficult to scale. Carbon removal credits of high quality and verified are in demand around the world. Many tech companies have committed to climate change but they are increasing greenhouse gas emissions in order to fuel the AI data centers boom. They have spent collectively hundreds of millions of dollar buying credits from projects that capture and store carbon.

People continue to sign contracts because they really want this to work. Petre said that very few projects had been completed.

Deep Sky's Alberta Pilot Facility, which began operating last summer, is designed to enable multiple DAC companies, to deploy and refine their technologies.

The credits are the result of Deep Sky injecting 14 tons of carbon underground in May, as verified by London's climate tech certification company Isometric.

Microsoft and RBC continue to receive quarterly credits.

Deep Sky?also holds carbon credit agreements with TD Bank, Lufthansa, and France's Engie. The companies have not revealed financial terms.

Petre stated that once Deep Sky's Alberta testing hub is fully operational, the company will develop a large scale commercial DAC project for Canada. Reporting by Amanda Stephenson, Calgary Editing Rod Nickel

(source: Reuters)