Frontier, an advance market commitment that aims to accelerate the development of carbon removal technology, said it has facilitated another set of direct air capture (DAC) offtake agreements with 280 Earth.
Frontier buyers have agreed to pay $40 million to 280 Earth to permanently remove 61,571 tons of COâ‚‚ between 2024 and 2030 at their pilot facility in The Dalles, Oregon.
The pilot module at The Dalles facility was completed in May 2024, and Frontier buyers are the first to purchase from that unit. These offtake agreements will support 280 Earth in building and operating additional modules at the facility.
Direct air capture (DAC) continues to be a promising carbon removal method.
Hannah Bebbington, Head of Strategy at Frontier, said, “DAC’s benefits make it an important potential part of the global carbon removal portfolio, but we need smart ways to lower costs and scale the pathway. 280 Earth’s unique process design offers them a pathway to overcome the challenging cost barrier for DAC.”
Read more: Heirloom announces plans to build two direct air capture plants in Louisiana 
280 Earth was initially launched in 2018 at X, the moonshot factory founded by Google, and became an independent entity in 2022. They aim to reduce the costs of DAC by minimizing both capital and operating expenses.
Chief Executive Officer 280 Earth John Pimentel said, “Frontier’s forward-thinking members are providing critical leadership to attract private sector investment to decarbonize our atmosphere. This contract provides revenues that help 280 Earth drive down costs for our highly efficient direct air capture system.”
280 Earth’s system operates continuously by drawing air into contact with a proprietary sorbent developed by the team, which captures the COâ‚‚.