Afleveringen
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8,000 companies have emission reduction targets validated by the Science Based Targets initiative. Only around 50 of them have so far purchased durable carbon removal.
Imagine if all of them purchased CDR? The impact could be >50Mt of demand. Per year. Starting from 2030.
On March 18th, the SBTi released the draft net-zero standard 2.0 which marks a potential inflection point. Will it:
Drive companies to begin CDR purchases immediately?Keep CDR voluntary until the 2040s?â Inadvertently push companies away from SBTi due to concerns about mandatory CDR costs?To make sense of this wide spectrum of possibilities, the CDR Policy Scoop is delighted to have Robert Höglund back on the show. He has been a member of the external SBTi Technical Advisory Group and understands the process and its implications for CDR like no other.
Links:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteRobert Höglund: LinkedIn, Website, and SBTi draft CNZS AnalysisSBTiâs draft Corporate Net Zero Standard ConsultationCarbon Direct Analysis on draft SBTi CNZSLukas May analysis on potential CDR demand of draft SBTiâs CNZSHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Aviation is responsible for almost 1Gt of CO2 emissions, or 2.5% of global emissions. Up to 4% when accounting for non-CO2 climate warming effects. And demand is only going up: 3-4% year-on-year.
Aviation is also notoriously hard to decarbonise: most hope is placed on sustainable aviation fuels (SAF). Given there will always be considerable residual emissions (ICAO: 200Mt-950Mt in 2050), carbon removal is central to aviationâs net-zero aspiration for 2050.
From a policy perspective, it is incredibly challenging to regulate, as 61% of aviation emissions are emitted on international flights and only 39% within a single countryâs boundaries.
A promising solution is emission trading systems for domestic/regional emissions (think EU ETS) and CORSIA for international emissions.
Sounds easy? The reality is incredibly complex, messy, and potentially worrying.
Listen in to hear Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart unpack this topic and provide clear solutions for what could be done in future.
Links:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsitePeople love flying, and that is not going to changeThe complex CORSIA vs EU ETS nexusE-fuels or storage â how to make the most of clean electricity and captured CO2ReFuelEU AviationCORSIAHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Will the EU need 2x as much CDR?
The highly anticipated 333-page milestone report on carbon removal by Europe's Scientific Advisory Board has landed, promising to be the most comprehensive analysis of CDR to date.
Does this heavyweight report deliver the strategic guidance needed to shape effective EU CDR policy? What other crucial insights does it offer â and more importantly, what might it have missed?
Eve and Sebastian delve into the report and share their take.
Tune in to find out more.
Links:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteReport: âScaling up carbon dioxide removals â Recommendations for navigating opportunities and risks in the EUâ by the European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate ChangeEveâs findings on the 333-page CDR reportWill the EU need twice as much CDR as expected?Supercharging carbon removal from the EUâs land sectorHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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In February 2025, all probationary contract staff at the Department of Energy were terminated, including the most incredibly talented and experienced people who had turned the U.S. into a CDR powerhouse over the previous years.
What does this - alongside the freezing of IRA and BIL funds - mean for CDR in the U.S. moving forward? How will DAC Hubs be affected? What about the Public Procurement Purchase Prize?
To make sense of this very difficult and sensitive situation, Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart are joined by the one and only Noah Deich, who initiated and led many of the CDR initiatives the DoE became famous for.
Tune in to find out more.
Links:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteNoah Deich: LinkedInReversing Climate Change Podcast on Spotify and Apple PodcastsSebastianâs post about CDR in DoE and follow-up/apologyX-Prize $100M Prize For Carbon RemovalHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Emission trading systems (ETS) are often touted as the largest potential source of demand for carbon dioxide removal (CDR), providing a large, predictable market worth billions.
The EU ETS is by far the largest and most successful in the world, with its market size around 900 billion EUR and carbon price climbing over 80 EUR/t.
2025 is the time when a lot of decisions to critical questions will need to be answered. From the design of such integration, to a selection of which CDR technologies, to the volume allowed.
Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart debate this hot topic where their views donât always align.
Tune in to find out more.
Links:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteShould biochar carbon removal (BCR) be integrated into the EU Emission Trading System?Carbon removals in the EU ETS. Good idea? Bad idea?Should negative emissions be included in the EU ETS?How to include carbon removals in the EU ETS?Putting the âNetâ in Net Zero: Carbon Removals and the EU Emissions Trading SystemThe Balancing Act: Risks and Benefits of Integrating Permanent Carbon Removals into the EU ETSHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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In carbon removal policy circles, three simple words - like-for-like - seem to come up more and more. It is a simple and obvious concept that is actually incredibly complex and misunderstood.
Robert Höglund joins Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart in exploring like-for-like as a concept, why it is becoming a core pillar of CDR policy design and what net-zero targets should actually look like.
Tune in to find out more
Links:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteRobert Höglund: LinkedIn, Website and SubstackGeological Net Zero and the need for disaggregated accounting for carbon sinksThe hidden risk in net zero targets: why storage durability mattersHow much carbon will we need to remove?Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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On January 28th, the European Commission hosted a long-awaited workshop on public funding for permanent CDR. Expectations were high - maybe too high?
What came out of it and what is lined up for funding of CDR in Europe? Both Eve (in person) and Sebastian (remote) attended, and are bringing you all the insights you need to know.
Tune in to find out more
Links:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastianâs critique on the report presented during the workshop.Official EU page for CDR funding (workshop recording should be uploaded here soon)Carbon Gap event on February 18th on CDR Funding in EuropeHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Donald J. Trump has been sworn in as the 47th President of the United States. As soon as he took office, executive orders were signed affecting all areas of the U.S. society and economy, including climate and CDR.
Joined by Erin Burns, the Executive Director of the U.S.â leading CDR nonprofit Carbon180, Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart try to make sense of a dynamic and fragile situation.
From the impact on the international stage, to how existing policy successes can be defended, to changes in narrative we might - or maybe absolutely shouldnât - adopt.
Tune in to find out more.
Links:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteErin Burns: LinkedInPodcast on this topic on Foresight MediaAnalysis on this topic in the Carbonfuture MagazineTrumpâs executive order on international environmental agreementsHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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What will be the main themes and developments this year?
2025 will likely be the biggest year for CDR policy to date. Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart compared and discussed their top 5 predictions, covering national, regional, and global CDR policy.
Tune in to get to know what to look out for in 2025.
Show notes:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The EUâs 2040 Climate Target(s): hope in difficult times or empty promises?
In 2025, the European Union will attempt to formalise a binding target for emission reduction in 2040. This would complement the existing 55% reduction target for 2030 and a climate neutrality target for 2050.
As of today, the European Commission plans to recommend an ambitious 90% reduction target for 2040. In the current political landscape, this will be a contested proposal.
What about the role of carbon dioxide removal? Will we be seeing the much asked for dedicated durable CDR target?
For the last CDR Policy Scoop of the year, Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart dive into this hot topic, which will likely shape much of 2025âs climate advocacy work in the EU.
Find out more:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteEU 2040 TargetProject Co2ol DownThe EUâs 2040 Climate Target â context, scope and designHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The CRCF - the gold standard for CDR certification?
Some see it as the world's most important CDR policy, others just as an empty shell with no clear impact.
In this CDR Policy Scoop, Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart dive into this hot topic they both feel very passionately about.
Tune in to hear where it currently stands, what some of the sticking points are, and how it will fit into European climate policy (or not).
Find out more:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteBackground piece on the CRCFAnalysis of the October CRCF Expert WorkshopWill the Carbon Removal Certification Framework count in the race to climate neutrality?Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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What will the Trump victory mean for CDR?
Speculation is rife - is this the end of CDR in the U.S., a blessing in disguise, or simply not that important?
In this CDR Policy Scoop, Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart are joined by the one and only Jason Grillo to dig into what this Republican trifecta of control over the White House, House of Congress, and Senate means for CDR â on both federal and state level â and also the implications for the world at large.
Find out more:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteJason Grillo: LinkedIn and SubstackMou-tora: A Dispatch from COP 29 on the Future of Paris in the Trump EraJason Grilloâs analysis of the U.S. election and its impact on CDRHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Will COP29 be the breakthrough COP for CDR?
What a start! Article 6.4 standards were adopted on day 1 of COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan. What does this actually mean, and what else can we expect?
In this CDR Policy Scoop, Eve Tamme and Sebastian Manhart try to make sense of a topic that has generated a lot of excitement but also raised some serious questions.
Find out more:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteParis Agreement Crediting MechanismPACM Standard: Requirements for activities involving removals under the Article 6.4 mechanismPACM Standard: Application of the requirements of Chapter V.B (Methodologies) for the development and assessment of Article 6.4 mechanism methodologiesHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The CDR Policy Scoop, where we unpack carbon removal policy in 30 minutes or less.
Punchy, unfiltered, to the point discussions on all hot developments in the sector.
Listen in to go several levels deeper and beyond the analysis that you won't find anywhere else. Enjoy.
Find out more:
Eve Tamme: LinkedIn and WebsiteSebastian Manhart: LinkedIn and WebsiteHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.