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Éliminez du carbone tout en développant votre entreprise

Stripe Climate est un moyen simple de favoriser le développement de technologies prometteuses d'élimination permanente du carbone. Joignez-vous à ces entreprises toujours plus nombreuses à participer à cet effort.

Démarrer

Choisissez la solution qui vous convient

Stripe Climate propose deux méthodes pour l'achat anticipé de services d'élimination du carbone. Tous les achats sont facilités par Frontier, une garantie d'achat futur de plus d'un milliard de dollars de services d'élimination du carbone d'ici 2030.

Climate Commitments

En quelques clics, reversez une partie vos revenus afin d'aider de toutes jeunes entreprises qui développent des technologies d'élimination du carbone pour le portefeuille de Frontier à passer du laboratoire au terrain. Cette solution est idéale pour les entreprises qui (i) souhaitent surtout contribuer au progrès dans ce domaine et (ii) n'ont pas besoin d'acheter un nombre spécifique de tonnes pour atteindre un objectif climatique.

Climate Orders

Précommandez un nombre précis de tonnes dans le Dashboard ou l'API Stripe. Celles-ci seront fournies à partir du portefeuille de contrats d'enlèvement de Frontier. Cette solution est idéale pour les entreprises qui (i) doivent acheter un nombre précis de tonnes pour atteindre un objectif climatique ou (ii) souhaitent proposer des options d'élimination du carbone à leurs propres clients.

Si vous pouvez conclure un engagement pluriannuel de plusieurs millions de dollars en faveur de l'élimination du carbone, Frontier est fait pour vous. Vous pouvez également verser une contribution ponctuelle.

Pourquoi financer l'élimination du carbone?

L'élimination du carbone est indispensable à la lutte contre le réchauffement climatique

Afin d'éviter les effets les plus catastrophiques du réchauffement climatique, nous devons limiter l'augmentation moyenne de la température mondiale à 1,5 °C par rapport aux niveaux de l'ère préindustrielle. Il est donc nécessaire, d'ici 2050, d'éliminer totalement les émissions mondiales de CO₂, qui s'élevaient en 2018 à environ 40 gigatonnes par an.

Pour atteindre cet objectif, nous devons à la fois considérablement réduire les nouvelles émissions de gaz à effet de serre dans l'air, et éliminer le carbone déjà présent dans l'atmosphère.

Scénario pour limiter l'augmentation de la température mondiale à ~1,5 °C
Limiter l'augmentation de la température mondiale à :
Émissions antérieures Scénario de ~2 °C Scénario de ~1,5 °C Scénario actuel
Élimination du carbone nécessaire pour limiter l'augmentation de la température mondiale à ~1,5 °C.
Émissions antérieures via Global Carbon Project,1 « Scénario actuel » indique SSP4-6.0,2,3 processus d'élimination adaptés de CICERO.4 Pour des raisons pratiques, ce graphique indique uniquement les émissions de CO₂, bien que les scénarios modélisés tiennent compte des émissions d'autres gaz à effet de serre, qui sont toutes à éliminer.

Toutefois, l'élimination du carbone est à la traîne

Bien que nécessaires, les solutions actuelles d'élimination du carbone comme la reforestation et la séquestration du carbone dans le sol ne suffiront pas à résoudre un problème de cette ampleur. Il est donc essentiel de développer de nouvelles technologies d'élimination du carbone qui, même si elles ne sont pas encore arrivées à pleine maturité, seront capables de traiter à moindre coût un volume important de carbone d'ici 2050.

Les solutions actuelles d'élimination du carbone sont confrontées au paradoxe de la poule et de l'œuf. Plus chères, ces technologies nouvelles attirent trop peu de clients, alors qu'une adoption massive est indispensable pour développer la production et réduire les coûts.

Les avant-gardistes peuvent contribuer à l'élimination du carbone

Les premiers acheteurs peuvent contribuer à réduire le coût des nouvelles technologies d'élimination du CO₂ et à augmenter leur volume de production. En effet, il a été maintes fois démontré qu'un déploiement à grande échelle est généralement source de progrès, un phénomène déjà observé dans les secteurs du séquençage de l'ADN, des disques durs et des panneaux solaires.

Cette réflexion a déterminé les premières acquisitions de Stripe et nous a finalement conduits à lancer Frontier, une garantie de marché visant à financer l'élimination du carbone. L'objectif est d'envoyer un signal fort aux chercheurs, entrepreneurs et investisseurs, et de leur montrer qu'il existe un marché en pleine expansion pour ces technologies. Nous souhaitons inverser la tendance et augmenter les chances de trouver les solutions dont le monde a besoin pour stopper les effets les plus dévastateurs du réchauffement climatique.

Représentation simplifiée de courbes d'expérience du Santa Fe Institute.5

Notre mode de sélection et de financement

Notre portefeuille et nos experts scientifiques

Tous les achats sont facilités par Frontier, une garantie de marché de plus d'un milliard de dollars d'élimination permanente du carbone d'ici 2030. L'équipe d'experts scientifiques et commerciaux de Frontier, assistée par plus de 60 conseillers techniques externes, sélectionne et évalue les technologies d'élimination du carbone les plus prometteuses. Découvrez les nombreuses initiatives d'élimination du carbone auxquelles nous participons, prenez connaissance de nos critères de sélection, ou consultez les projets collaboratifs.

Critères de sélection

Découvrez les points que nous étudions lors de l'évaluation des projets.

Candidatures soumises

Consultez les candidatures soumises concernant des projets collaboratifs.

Planetary project image

Planetary adds alkaline minerals to coastal surface waters to capture CO₂. With this offtake, Planetary is expanding on the pilot project that delivered the world’s first verified ocean alkalinity enhancement tons, and initiating the next phase of operation with deliveries starting in 2026.

Arbor project image

Arbor uses waste biomass to create clean energy while capturing CO₂. This offtake will enable the launch of Arbor’s first commercial facility. It will also test the viability of a new BECCS approach that has a 99% CO₂ capture rate and can generate up to 1,000 kWh of clean energy per ton of CO₂ removed.

Hafslund Celsio project image

Hafslund Celsio is the largest supplier of district heating in Norway. They are proposing to retrofit the Klemetsrud waste-to-energy (WtE) facility with a CO₂ capture unit, followed by intermediate CO₂ storage at the Oslo harbor, ship transport to the North Sea, and geologic sequestration at Northern Lights.

Eion project image

Eion accelerates mineral weathering by mixing silicate rocks into soil. Their pelletized product is applied by farmers and ranchers to increase carbon in the soil, which over time makes its way into the ocean where it’s permanently stored as bicarbonate. Alongside their technology development, Eion is also conducting a novel soil study to improve the field's measurement of CO₂ uptake.

Phlair project image

Phlair is developing an electrochemical approach to direct air capture that’s energy efficient and designed to work with intermittent renewable energy sources, like solar. This offtake will support Phlair’s first commercial-scale facility in Alberta, Canada.

CREW project image

CREW is building specialized reactors to enhance natural weathering. The container-based system creates optimized conditions to speed up the weathering of alkaline minerals, and the discharged water stores CO₂ from wastewater safely and permanently as bicarbonate ions in the ocean. CREW’s system makes measuring CO₂ removed easier and can react with CO₂ from a variety of sources, including direct air capture and biomass systems, to maximize scale.

Terradot project image

Terradot spreads crushed basalt rock onto acidic and nutrient-depleted agricultural soils in Brazil. The rock material absorbs CO₂ from the air and soil, turning it into a form that enters runoff and permanent storage in the ocean.

CarbonRun project image

CarbonRun adds crushed limestone to rivers to raise their pH, storing CO₂ as dissolved bicarbonate in the river and ultimately in the ocean. In addition to CO₂ removal, CarbonRun’s work also benefits river ecosystems locally by increasing the pH.

280 Earth project image

280 Earth’s continuous direct air capture system is a flexible design built with commercially available components and can draw power from several sources, including electricity or industrial waste heat. The captured CO₂ stream is then stored permanently.

Exergi project image

Exergi is retrofitting one of their biomass-based district heating facilities in Stockholm to capture CO₂ produced as a byproduct of the combustion process. The CO₂ is extracted from the flue gas by mixing it with a solution of potassium carbonate. The resulting potassium bicarbonate is heated, breaking it down into carbon dioxide and water. The extracted carbon dioxide is then transported away for permanent geologic storage.

Vaulted Deep project image

Vaulted injects carbon-rich organic waste biomass deep underground for permanent storage. This disposal method also replaces harmful disposal practices like land application and incineration. As a spinoff from an established waste disposal company, Vaulted benefits from already-permitted well infrastructure, and a team with longstanding operational experience.

Lithos project image

Lithos accelerates the natural ability of rocks to absorb CO₂ by spreading superfine crushed basalt on farmlands and measuring the removal empirically. They’re pioneering a novel measurement technique that more accurately quantifies the carbon permanently removed from enhanced weathering.

Heirloom project image

Over geologic timescales, CO₂ chemically binds to minerals and permanently turns to stone. Heirloom is building a direct air capture solution that accelerates this process to absorb CO₂ from the ambient air in days rather than years, and then extracts the CO₂ to be stored permanently underground.

CarbonCapture Inc. project image

CarbonCapture’s direct air capture machines use solid sorbents that soak up atmospheric CO₂ and release concentrated CO₂ when heated. CarbonCapture’s core innovation is making the capture system modular and upgradeable so that they can swap in best-in-class sorbents as they become available. The captured CO₂ stream is then stored permanently underground.

Charm Industrial project image

Charm Industrial has created a novel process for preparing and injecting bio-oil into geologic storage. Bio-oil is produced from biomass and maintains much of the carbon that was captured naturally by the plants. By injecting it into secure geologic storage, they’re making the carbon storage permanent.

Alithic project image

Alithic couples a solvent CO₂ capture process with a novel ion exchange method for efficient solvent regeneration. This process reacts CO₂ with industrial wastes and upgrades it into a material that can be resold for producing low-carbon concrete. Their approach has the potential for low-energy removal at scale and can be used flexibly across a wide range of alkaline feedstocks.

Alt Carbon project image

Alt Carbon spreads basalt on tea plantations in the Himalayan foothills, where the hot, humid environment helps speed up the natural reaction with water to remove CO₂ and store it as durable bicarbonate. This project uses a novel verification approach using metal tracers in the soil to reduce the cost of measurement and further understanding of weathering in new geographies. Alt Carbon’s project also improves soil health and provides additional revenue for farmers in an industry threatened by rising costs and climate change.

Anvil project image

Anvil contacts highly reactive alkaline minerals with atmospheric CO₂ in a low-energy system that speeds up the mineralization process. The resulting solid carbonate minerals are then stored durably on-site and the removal can be easily measured. The team is targeting a promising feedstock and accelerating its broad use for removal at scale.

Capture6 project image

Capture6 uses electricity and saltwater in an electrochemical system to remove CO₂ while eliminating industrial waste streams. They use proven technologies and can flexibly integrate across a range of industrial processes to generate co-products like clean metals or freshwater, increasing the likelihood they can scale quickly and cheaply. This project also accelerates research around using low-carbon chemical byproducts productively.

Exterra Carbon Solutions project image

Exterra Carbon Solutions uses a thermochemical process to transform mine waste into fast-dissolving alkaline minerals that can be used to remove carbon in a variety of ways. For their pilot, they are partnering with Planetary to mix their material into coastal outfalls where it draws down atmospheric CO₂ and is stored durably in the form of oceanic bicarbonate. Their process cleans up mine sites by eliminating asbestos residues and extracts valuable low carbon metals like nickel that can be sold to reduce the cost of removal.

Flux project image

Flux accelerates the natural ability of rocks to absorb CO₂ by spreading basalt on farms in Sub-Saharan Africa, a region with high weathering potential due to its humid, tropical climate. They are introducing field weathering to new regions and developing a tech platform to make robust, responsible measurement and future deployments easier. In addition to storing CO₂ as bicarbonate, the approach provides significant agronomic benefits to farmers who have historically had less access to soil amendments such as fertilizer or lime.

NULIFE project image

NULIFE uses a process called hydrothermal liquefaction to efficiently transform wet waste biomass into a bio-oil that is cheap to transport and is injected underground for permanent removal. Their process can destroy contaminants in waste biomass like PFAS and generates potential scalable co-products that lower the price of carbon removal.

Planeteers project image

Planeteers uses a novel pressure-swing process to convert limestone, a cheap and abundant feedstock, into hydrated carbonate minerals, a fast-dissolving material that can be a scalable feedstock for a range of carbon removal approaches. Their pilot project mixes this material into water treatment plant outflows where it reacts with CO₂ in the air to form durable bicarbonate. This approach is easy to measure and leverages existing infrastructure, reducing costs.

Silica project image

Silica applies basalt and other volcanic rocks across sugarcane farms in Mexico, where warm, wet conditions speed up the weathering of the materials and storage of CO₂ as bicarbonate. They are pioneering a novel approach that could make carbon removal measurement on small farms easier and cheaper and are working with consumer brands to demonstrate how carbon removal can be incorporated into agricultural supply chains.

Airhive project image

Airhive is building a geochemical direct air capture system using an ultra porous sorbent structure that can be made out of cheap and abundant minerals. This sorbent reacts rapidly with atmospheric CO₂ when mixed with air in Airhive’s fluidized bed reactor. Coupled with a regeneration process that’s powered by electricity to release the CO₂ for geologic storage, this provides a promising approach to low-cost DAC.

Alkali Earth project image

Alkali Earth uses alkaline byproducts, like steel slag, as gravel aggregates for building road surfaces. The calcium- and magnesium-rich minerals in the gravel react with atmospheric CO₂ to form stable carbonates, storing it permanently while cementing the road surfaces. Spreading the gravel across roads increases the surface area exposed to CO₂ and leverages road traffic to agitate the gravel further, accelerating CO₂ uptake.

Banyu Carbon project image

Banyu uses sunlight to capture CO₂ from seawater and store it permanently. A reusable, light-activated molecule that becomes acidic when exposed to light causes carbon dissolved in seawater to degas as CO₂, which is then compressed for storage. Because only a small portion of the visible light spectrum is needed to trigger the reaction and the light-activated molecule can be reused thousands of times, this is a highly energy-efficient approach to direct ocean removal.

CarbonBlue project image

CarbonBlue has developed a calcium looping process to remove CO₂ from seawater or freshwater. Their novel mineralization, dissolution and brine hydrolysis regeneration releases CO₂ captured from water without needing any external feedstock of minerals or chemicals. The reactors are highly energy efficient and require a low enough regeneration temperature to enable utilization of waste heat.

EDAC Labs project image

EDAC Labs uses an electrochemical process to produce acid and base. The acid is used to start the recovery of valuable metals from mining waste, and the base is used to capture CO₂ from air. The acid and base streams are then combined to produce metals that can be sold for applications such as batteries, and solid carbonates which permanently store CO₂. The EDAC Labs process is energy efficient, uses abundant mine wastes, and produces valuable revenue-generating co-products.

Holocene project image

Holocene captures CO₂ from air using organic molecules that can be produced at low cost. In the first step of their process, CO₂ is captured from air when it comes into contact with a liquid solution. In the second step, a chemical reaction crystallizes the material as a solid. That solid is heated up to release the CO₂, minimizing energy wasted in heating water. Their process runs at lower temperatures, further reducing the energy required and increasing energy flexibility.

Mati project image

Mati applies silicate rock powders to agricultural fields, starting with rice paddy farms in India. These rocks react with water and CO₂ to produce dissolved inorganic carbon that is subsequently stored in the local watershed and eventually in the ocean. Mati relies on rice field flooding and higher subtropical temperatures to accelerate weathering, and extensive sampling and soil and river modeling to measure removal and deliver co-benefits to smallholder farmers.

Spiritus project image

Spiritus uses a sorbent made from a readily available polymer with a high capacity for CO₂. The CO₂-saturated sorbent is regenerated using a novel desorption process, capturing the CO₂ and allowing the sorbent to be reused with less energy than a higher-heat vacuum chamber typically used in direct air capture approaches. The high-performance, inexpensive sorbent and lower regeneration energy provide a path to low cost.

Rewind.earth project image

Rewind sinks agricultural and forest residues to the oxygenless bottom of the Black Sea, the largest anoxic body of water on Earth. Oxygenless water dramatically slows biomass decomposition. The lack of living organisms in the Black Sea limits any potential ecosystem risks. Through pilot deployments, the team will examine the durability of sunken biomass and better ways to measure and model the carbon removed.

Carboniferous project image

Carboniferous sinks bundles of leftover sugarcane fiber and corn stover into deep, salty, oxygenless basins in the Gulf of Mexico. The lack of oxygen in these environments–and therefore absence of animals and most microbes–slows the breakdown of biomass so it is preserved and stored durably in ocean sediments. The team will experiment to determine the stability of sunken biomass as well as the interaction with ocean biogeochemistry.

Arca project image

Arca is capturing CO₂ from the atmosphere and mineralizing it into rock. They work with producers of critical metals, transforming mine waste into a massive carbon sink. With autonomous rovers, their approach accelerates carbon mineralization, a natural process storing CO₂ permanently as new carbonate minerals. By creating a system that works directly at the mine site, Arca avoids the cost and emissions of moving material to processing facilities.

Captura project image

Captura is harnessing the ocean for scalable removal by designing an electrochemical process to separate acid and base from seawater. The acid is used to remove CO₂ that’s present in seawater, which is injected for permanent geologic storage. The base is used to treat and return the remaining water safely to the ocean, and the ocean then draws down further CO₂ from the atmosphere. Captura is developing optimized membranes to increase electrical efficiency and reduce removal costs.

Carbon To Stone project image

Carbon To Stone is developing a new form of direct air capture, in which a solvent that binds CO₂ is regenerated by reacting with alkaline waste materials. By replacing conventional solvent regeneration using heat or pressure changes with direct mineralization of low-cost alkaline wastes such as steel slag, the team can significantly reduce the energy, and thus the cost, required. The CO₂ is durably stored as solid carbonate materials that can be used for alternative cements.

Cella project image

Cella increases the options for safe and secure carbon storage via mineralization. They accelerate the natural process that converts CO₂ into solid mineral form by injecting it into volcanic rock formations together with saline water and geothermal brine waste, with an approach that lowers cost and minimizes environmental impacts. Cella’s technology integrates low-carbon geothermal heat and can be paired with a variety of capture methods.

InPlanet project image

InPlanet accelerates natural mineral weathering to permanently sequester CO₂ and regenerate tropical soils. They partner with farmers to apply safe silicate rock powders under warmer and wetter conditions that can result in faster weathering rates and thus faster CO₂ drawdown. The team is developing monitoring stations to generate public field trial data to improve the field’s understanding of how weathering rates vary under tropical soil and weather conditions across Brazil.

Kodama project image

Kodama Systems and the Yale Carbon Containment Lab are deploying a proof-of-concept method of storing waste woody biomass by burying it in anoxic chambers underground, preventing decomposition. The team will experiment with how chamber conditions and above-ground disturbances impact durability and reversal risk.

Nitricity project image

Nitricity is exploring the potential of integrating carbon removal into a novel process for the electrified production of clean fertilizer. This process combines carbon-neutral nitrogen compounds, phosphate rock and CO₂, producing nitrophosphates for the fertilizer industry and storing CO₂ durably as limestone. This new pathway could present a low-cost storage solution for dilute CO₂ streams with co-benefits of decarbonizing the fertilizer industry.

AspiraDAC project image

AspiraDAC is building a modular, solar-powered direct air capture system with the energy supply integrated into the modules. Their metal-organic framework sorbent has low temperature heat requirements and a path to cheap material costs, and their modular approach allows them to experiment with a more distributed scale-up.

RepAir project image

RepAir uses clean electricity to capture CO₂ from the air using a novel electrochemical cell and partners with Carbfix to inject and mineralize the CO₂ underground. The demonstrated energy efficiency of RepAir’s capture step is already notable and continues to advance. This approach has the potential to deliver low-cost carbon removal that minimizes added strain to the electric grid.

Travertine project image

Travertine is re-engineering chemical production for carbon removal. Using electrochemistry, Travertine produces sulfuric acid to accelerate the weathering of ultramafic mine tailings, releasing reactive elements that convert carbon dioxide from the air into carbonate minerals that are stable on geologic timescales. Their process turns mining waste into a source of carbon removal as well as raw materials for other clean transition technologies such as batteries.

Calcite-Origen project image

This project, a collaboration between 8 Rivers and Origen, accelerates the natural process of carbon mineralization by contacting highly reactive slaked lime with ambient air to capture CO₂. The resulting carbonate minerals are calcined to create a concentrated CO₂ stream for geologic storage, and then looped continuously. The inexpensive materials and fast cycle time make this a promising approach to affordable capture at scale.

Living Carbon project image

Living Carbon wants to engineer algae to rapidly produce sporopollenin, a highly durable biopolymer which can then be dried, harvested and stored. Initial research aims to better understand the field’s thinking on the durability of sporopollenin as well as the optimal algae strain to quickly produce it. Applying synthetic biology tools to engineer natural systems for improved and durable carbon capture has the potential to be a low-cost and scalable removal pathway.

Climeworks project image

Climeworks uses renewable geothermal energy and waste heat to capture CO₂ directly from the air, concentrate it, and permanently sequester it underground in basaltic rock formations with Carbfix.

CarbonCure project image

CarbonCure injects CO₂ into fresh concrete, where it mineralizes and is permanently stored while improving the concrete’s compressive strength.

Vesta project image

Project Vesta captures CO₂ by applying an abundant, naturally occurring mineral called olivine to coastlines. As ocean waves break down the olivine, it captures atmospheric CO₂ from within the ocean and stabilizes it as limestone on the seafloor.

Running Tide project image

Running Tide releases buoys made of waste wood which grow macroalgae as they float in the open ocean. The buoys then sink, storing the biomass carbon in the deep ocean sediment.

Equatic project image

Equatic leverages the power and scale of the world’s oceans to remove carbon. Their experimental electrochemical process sequesters CO₂ in seawater as carbonates, an inert material comparable to seashells, thereby enabling energy-efficient and permanent CO₂ removal.

Mission Zero project image

Mission Zero electrochemically removes CO₂ from the air and concentrates it for a variety of sequestration pathways. Their experimental process can be powered with clean electricity and has the potential to achieve low costs and high volumes.

CarbonBuilt project image

CarbonBuilt’s process readily converts dilute CO₂ into calcium carbonate, creating a “no compromise” low-carbon alternative to traditional concrete.

44.01 project image

44.01 turns CO₂ into rock, harnessing the natural power of mineralization. Their technology injects CO₂ into peridotite, an abundantly available rock, where it is stored permanently. This storage approach can be paired with a variety of capture technologies.

Ebb project image

Ebb Carbon mitigates ocean acidification while capturing CO₂. Using membranes and electrochemistry, Ebb removes acid from the ocean and enhances its natural ability to draw down CO₂ from the air for storage as oceanic bicarbonate.

Sustaera project image

Sustaera uses ceramic monolith air contactors to capture CO₂ directly from the air for permanent storage underground. Their direct air capture system, powered by carbon-free electricity and built with modular components, is designed for quick manufacturing and capture at scale.

UNDO project image

UNDO spreads crushed basalt rock on agricultural land, accelerating the natural process of rock weathering. CO₂ dissolved in rainwater reacts with the rock, mineralizes and is safely stored on geologic timescales as bicarbonate. The team is conducting lab and field trials to further the evidence of enhanced rock weathering as a permanent, scalable, nature-enabled technology for carbon removal.

Arbon project image

Arbon uses a 'humidity-swing' process to capture CO₂ from the air. The sorbent binds CO₂ when dry and releases it when wet. This process uses less energy than approaches that rely on changing temperature and pressure to release CO₂. The sorbent’s ability to bind CO₂ has been shown to remain stable over thousands of cycles. Both of these innovations could reduce the cost of DAC.

Vycarb project image

Vycarb uses a reactor to add limestone alkalinity to coastal ocean water, resulting in the drawdown and storage of atmospheric CO₂. Their dissolution system has a novel sensing apparatus that base tests water, dissolves calcium carbonate, and doses alkalinity into the water at a controlled amount safe for dispersion. Their closed system makes it easier to measure the amount of dissolved alkalinity added and CO₂ removed.

Experts techniques

Brentan Alexander, Ph. D.

Tuatara Advisory
Commercialisation des technologies

Stephanie Arcusa, Ph. D.

Université d'État de l'Arizona
Gouvernance

Habib Azarabadi, Ph. D.

Arizona State University
Extraction directe dans l'air

Damian Brady, Ph. D.

Darling Marine Center de l'Université du Maine
Océans

Robert Brown, Ph. D.

Université d'État de l'Iowa
Biocharbon

Holly Jean Buck, Ph. D.

Université d'État de New York à Buffalo
Gouvernance

Liam Bullock, Ph. D.

Geosciences Barcelona
Géochimie

Wil Burns, Ph. D.

Université Northwestern
Gouvernance

Micaela Taborga Claure, Ph. D.

Repsol
Extraction directe dans l'air

Struan Coleman

Darling Marine Center de l'Université du Maine
Océans

Niall Mac Dowell, Ph. D.

Imperial College London
Biomasse/bioénergie

Anna Dubowik

Negative Emissions Platform
Gouvernance

Petrissa Eckle, Ph. D.

École polytechnique fédérale de Zurich
Filières énergétiques

Erika Foster, Ph. D.

Point Blue Conservation Science
Écologie des écosystèmes

Matteo Gazzani, titulaire d'un Ph. D.

Utrecht University Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development
Extraction directe dans l'air

Lauren Gifford, titulaire d'un Ph. D.

University of Arizona’s School of Geography, Development & Environment
Gouvernance

Sophie Gill

Université d'Oxford, département des sciences de la terre
Océans

Emily Grubert, Ph. D.

University of Notre Dame
Gouvernance

Steve Hamburg, Ph. D.

Environmental Defense Fund
Écologie des écosystèmes

Booz Allen Hamilton

Équipe des technologies de l'énergie
Captage direct du CO₂ dans l'air/la biomasse

Jens Hartmann, Ph. D.

Université de Hambourg
Géochimie

Anna-Maria Hubert, titulaire d'un Ph. D.

University of Calgary Faculty of Law
Gouvernance

Lennart Joos, Ph. D.

Out of the Blue
Océans

Marc von Keitz, Ph. D.

Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment
Océans/biomasse

Yayuan Liu, Ph. D.

Université Johns Hopkins
Électrochimie

Matthew Long, Ph. D.

National Center for Atmospheric Research
Océans

Susana García López, Ph. D.

Université Heriot-Watt
Extraction directe dans l'air

Kate Maher, Ph. D.

Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment
Géochimie

John Marano, Ph. D.

JM Energy Consulting
Commercialisation des technologies

Dan Maxbauer, Ph. D.

Carleton College
Géochimie

Alexander Muroyama, Ph. D.

Institut Paul Scherrer
Électrochimie

Sara Nawaz, Ph. D.

Université d'Oxford
Gouvernance

Rebecca Neumann, Ph. D.

Université de Washington
Biocharbon/géochimie

NexantECA

Équipe des technologies de l'énergie
Captage direct du CO₂ dans l'air/la biomasse

Daniel Nothaft, Ph. D.

Université de Pennsylvanie
Minéralisation

Simon Pang, Ph. D.

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Extraction directe dans l'air

Teagen Quilichini, titulaire d'un Ph. D.

Conseil national de recherches du Canada
Biologie

Zach Quinlan

Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Océans

Mim Rahimi, Ph. D.

Université de Houston
Électrochimie

Vikram Rao, Ph. D.

Research Triangle Energy Consortium
Minéralisation

Paul Reginato, titulaire d'un Ph. D

Innovative Genomics Institute at UC Berkeley
Biotechnologie

Debra Reinhart, titulaire d'un Ph. D.

University of Central Florida
Gestion des déchets

Phil Renforth, Ph. D.

Université Heriot-Watt
Minéralisation

Sarah Saltzer, Ph. D.

Stanford Center for Carbon Storage
Stockage géologique

Saran Sohi, Ph. D.

Université d'Édimbourg
Biocharbon

Mijndert van der Spek, Ph. D.

Université Heriot-Watt
Extraction directe dans l'air

Max Tuttman

The AdHoc Group
Commercialisation des technologies

Shannon Valley, Ph. D.

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Océans

Jayme Walenta, Ph. D.

Université du Texas, Austin
Gouvernance

Frances Wang

Fondation ClimateWorks
Gouvernance

Fabiano Ximenes, titulaire d'un Ph. D.

New South Wales Department of Primary Industries
Biomasse/bioénergie

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