Carbon Negative Shot

What is the Carbon Negative Shot™? The Carbon Negative Shot is an all-hands-on-deck call for innovation in carbon dioxide removal pathways that will capture carbon dioxide from the atmosphere or ocean and store it at gigatonne scales for less than $100/net metric tonne of carbon dioxide-equivalent. To date, DOE has focused on the following carbon dioxide removal pathways: direct air capture with storage, soil carbon storage, biomass carbon removal and storage, enhanced mineralization, marine carbon dioxide removal, and afforestation/reforestation.

Carbon dioxide removal draws down greenhouse gas emissions, reducing warming effects.

In November 2021, DOE launched the Carbon Negative Shot to advance the development of this emerging, but necessary carbon dioxide removal industry. By 2032, this all-hands-on-deck approach to carbon dioxide removal innovation aims to achieve carbon dioxide removal that is affordable (<$100 per tonne averaged across pathways), durable (100+ years), and gigatonne(s) in scale. 

Carbon dioxide removal refers to a diverse array of approaches that remove carbon dioxide—direct air capture with storage, soil carbon storage, biomass carbon removal and storage, enhanced mineralization, marine carbon dioxide removal, and afforestation/reforestation—from the atmosphere and ocean. The carbon dioxide is then stored in geological, terrestrial, or ocean reservoirs, or in long-lived products. 

Large-scale carbon dioxide removal is essential to achieving global climate goals of limiting global warming to 1.5⁰C above pre-industrial levels to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. Several climate models, including those produced by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, show that reducing carbon dioxide emissions alone is not enough to combat climate change. Why? Because reducing emissions alone doesn’t address the trillions of tonnes of carbon dioxide already in our atmosphere. While the exact amount of carbon removal required depends on the speed of emissions reductions, scientists widely agree that carbon dioxide removal is necessary.  

To reach net-zero carbon, we must continue to rapidly reduce emissions and deploy clean energy technologies. In parallel, we will also need to remove carbon dioxide to address residual emissions from hard-to-abate industries, such as agriculture and shipping. 

Carbon Dioxide removal equipment

The climate crisis calls for a different kind of moonshot. Energy Earthshots will accelerate breakthroughs of more abundant, affordable, and reliable clean energy solutions within the decade.  They will drive the major innovation breakthroughs that we know we must achieve to solve the climate crisis, reach our 2050 net-zero carbon goals, and create the jobs of the new clean energy economy. The Energy Earthshots target the remaining solution points of the most challenging technical problems across our energy economy.

Highlights

DOE carbon dioxide removal initiatives align with the Carbon Negative Shot.
EERE branding for innovation, vials of algae.

Impact and Engagement

Achieving the Carbon Negative Shot goal will help spur innovation and position U.S. enterprises as leaders in research, manufacturing, and deployment in a carbon dioxide removal industry that must have a rapid, global ramp-up by mid-century. 

It will also position America to lead the way to acheiving net-zero carbon on a global scale, eventually remove legacy greenhouse gas emissions from the atmosphere, create good-paying job opportunities that build on the skillsets of the fossil fuel workforce, and prioritize community needs.  

As a driver for this necessary and emerging industry, Carbon Negative Shot prioritizes information sharing and engagement with communities that could participate in or be affected by carbon dioxide removal, including environmental and climate organizations, tribal nations, labor groups, industry, and academia. Carbon Negative Shot also supports a whole-of-government approach and seeks alignment in federal, state, and local areas. 

Supporting Offices

Resource Library