From reality to scale-up: an order of magnitude closer to gigaton scale
On 28 June 2022, we broke ground on Climeworks’ second and newest commercial direct air capture and storage plant Mammoth in Iceland. Only 18 months later, the infrastructure of the plant has been successfully put in place, with 90% of the systems operational, including that of storage partner Carbfix.
Mammoth represents a demonstrable step in the company’s scale-up roadmap, moving Climeworks’ carbon removal capacity from thousands of tons to tens of thousands of tons per year – an important milestone on the way to megaton capacity by 2030 and gigaton by 2050.
The plant is designed for a nameplate capacity of up to 36,000 tons per year. The actual net removal will be lower, following Climeworks’ carbon removal production waterfall.
Proof point of Climeworks’ modular technology design and high-quality carbon removal
Climeworks broke ground on Mammoth in June 2022. Only 18 months later, the core pieces of the plant are built. The rest of 2024 will be dedicated to completing the plant's buildout, adding the remaining 60 CO₂ collector containers, and ramping up its operations. This phased initiation underscores Climeworks' flagship modular technology design, facilitating the construction of plants of varying sizes.
With Mammoth, the company gains further field experience on a whole new level of scale. The engineering and operational learnings will inform Climeworks’ future scale-up steps – this is deployment-led innovation.
Mammoth also brings new high-quality carbon removal capacity to the market for Climeworks to provide to its customers. Like at Orca, Climeworks aims to third-party verify and certify the carbon removal performed at Mammoth and delivered to customers.
A word from our founders
Overview of Mammoth’s progress
Lead the race toward net zero
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