A single Direct Air Capture (DAC) plant that captures 1 million tonnes of CO₂ annually needs just 0.4–1.5 km² — equivalent to 46 million trees that would occupy 3,000–4,700 km². “Artificial trees” aren't science fiction. They're already reality, and they're fundamentally changing how we fight the climate crisis.
What Is Direct Air Capture (DAC)?
Direct Air Capture (DAC) removes CO₂ directly from ambient air using chemical or physical processes. Unlike traditional carbon capture and storage (CCS), which collects CO₂ from point sources (factories, power plants), DAC reduces the overall atmospheric CO₂ concentration — functioning as “reverse pollution.”
The technology was first proposed in 1999 and earned the nickname “artificial trees” in the media, analogous to real trees that absorb CO₂ through photosynthesis. The difference: a single DAC plant does the work of millions of trees in a fraction of the land area.
How It Works
The process involves three stages: (1) Contacting — large fans push atmospheric air into the equipment. (2) Capture — CO₂ binds to liquid solvents (amines or caustics like NaOH) or solid sorbents. (3) Separation — external energy (heat) releases the CO₂ in pure form while the solvent regenerates for reuse.
Two mature technologies exist: L-DAC (liquid sorbents — amines or metallic hydroxides, high temperature) and S-DAC (solid sorbents — low temperature). Emerging methods include membranes (m-DAC), electro-swing adsorption (ESA), and Klaus Lackner's moisture swing sorbent (Arizona State University).
The Key Players
| Company | Technology | Capacity | Cost/tCO₂ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Climeworks (Switzerland) | S-DAC + CarbFix mineralization | 36,000 t/yr (Mammoth) | ~$1,000 |
| Carbon Engineering (Canada) | L-DAC (KOH) + synthetic fuels | 1 t/day pilot | $94–232 at scale |
| Heirloom (USA) | Calcium carbonate sorbent | 1,000 t/yr (Tracy, CA) | — |
| Carbon Collect (Ireland) | MechanicalTree™ passive capture | 100+ t/yr per unit | Target $200 by 2030 |
| Global Thermostat (USA) | Amine sorbent on carbon sponges | Up to 50,000 t/yr | ~$120 (claimed) |
Climeworks: From Orca to Mammoth
Climeworks (Zurich) built the first industrial-scale DAC plant in 2017 in Hinwil, Switzerland, capturing 900 tonnes of CO₂ annually using waste heat from a local incineration plant. The CO₂ was supplied to a nearby greenhouse.
Orca (Iceland, 2021) was the first large-scale DAC plant, targeting 4,000 t/yr — but in practice achieved only ~600 t/yr. It's powered by geothermal energy (Hellisheidi Power Plant) and uses CarbFix technology: CO₂ is injected 700 meters underground, mineralizing into basaltic bedrock for permanent storage.
In May 2024, Climeworks activated Mammoth — the world's largest DAC plant. Capacity: 36,000 tonnes CO₂/yr at full operation, equivalent to removing ~7,800 gasoline cars from the road. Cost: ~$1,000/tCO₂ — expensive, but at larger scale (1 Mtpa+) estimated to drop to $94–232.
MechanicalTree™: Trees Without Fans
Ireland-based Carbon Collect, in collaboration with Arizona State University's Center for Negative Carbon Emissions and Professor Klaus Lackner, developed the MechanicalTree™ — a structure that simply stands in the wind and captures CO₂ passively. It uses ion exchange resin tiles that absorb CO₂ when dry and release it when exposed to moisture (moisture swing sorbent).
"Passive capture" means no fans are required — dramatically reducing energy costs. The company targets a cost of $200/tCO₂ by 2030, and the system's geometry favors gigaton-scale deployment.
Carbon Engineering and the Future of Synthetic Fuels
Carbon Engineering (British Columbia, 2009), backed among others by Bill Gates, uses potassium hydroxide (KOH) solution for CO₂ capture. Its pilot plant operated since 2015, capturing ~1 tonne of CO₂ per day. A 2015–2018 study estimated costs at $94–232/tCO₂ at industrial scale.
In partnership with Greyrock, part of the captured CO₂ is converted into synthetic fuels — gasoline, diesel, jet fuel. In November 2023, Occidental Petroleum acquired Carbon Engineering for $1.1 billion — a move that drew criticism, with opponents arguing the oil industry uses DAC to extend the life of fossil fuels.
The Cost Challenge
The biggest barrier to DAC is cost. Initial estimates suggested $100–300/tCO₂ — but reality shows >$1,000/tCO₂ at small scale (<50,000 t/yr). The reason: current production capacity is extremely small. At 1 Mtpa+ scale, costs fall to $94–232 — economies of scale.
The US government is investing heavily: $3.5 billion through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law for 4 DAC hubs, plus $1.2 billion for facilities in Texas and Louisiana. Policy support (45Q tax credits, carbon contracts for difference) is considered critical for acceleration.
Environmental Footprint
DAC isn't automatically “green.” With renewable energy, it emits just 0.01 tCO₂ per tCO₂ captured. But with grid electricity and natural gas heating, it reaches 0.65 tCO₂ — meaning it only net removes 35%. The energy source determines whether DAC is truly worthwhile.
L-DAC systems (amines) require significant water: an estimated 3.3 Gt CO₂ capture would need 300 km³ of water — 4% of global irrigation water. S-DAC and passive capture (MechanicalTree) have a much smaller water footprint.
Applications Beyond Storage
Captured CO₂ doesn't just go underground. Applications include: synthetic fuels (aviation, shipping — closed carbon cycle), concrete strengthening (CarbonCure, Heirloom), beverage carbonation (Global Thermostat–Coca-Cola), algae cultivation (greenhouse CO₂ enrichment), and geological storage (mineralization in basalt, Iceland).
Soletair Power (Finland) integrates DAC into building HVAC systems — capturing CO₂ through building ventilation. Skytree developed technology based on ISS (International Space Station) CO₂ scrubbers. ETH Zürich is researching photoacids for DAC with minimal energy input.
Global Impact
The Critical Debate
Proponents consider DAC an essential component of climate policy — net zero is impossible without it, especially for aviation, industrial, and agricultural emissions. The IPCC states: every pathway limiting warming to 1.5°C includes CDR.
Opponents worry about moral hazard: the promise of future CO₂ removal could “justify” delaying emission cuts today. Critics note the market is dominated by oil companies (Occidental, ExxonMobil) — and that the high cost means resources that could go toward renewables instead.
Horizon 2030–2050
Artificial trees won't save the planet alone. But without them, net zero is impossible. DAC is the technology that gives us the ability to “undo” part of the damage — as long as it's powered by clean energy and doesn't become an alibi for inaction.
