The carbon removal company, recently spun out from the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering’s Institute for Carbon Management, believes it has stolen a march on competitors through its dual-use technology, which can address legacy and future emissions in a single process.

Equatic aims to become a major producer of carbon-negative hydrogen, created from processes that reduce atmospheric CO2. The hydrogen will be sold as a clean energy source to decarbonise industrial processes, produce electricity for the transportation sector, create Sustainable Aviation Fuels (SAFs) and fuels for trucking, and power the Equatic technology itself.

Equatic’s carbon removal plant uses four inputs, seawater, air, rock, and renewable electricity, to remove and store CO2 while simultaneously generating carbon-negative hydrogen.

Lorenzo Corsini, Principal Advisor at Equatic – which claims its technology can be produced at low cost and ‘giga scale’ – said the world has two unprecedented challenges: how to remove and permanently store gigatons of carbon dioxide and how to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels.

He said, “Equatic’s first-of-its-kind technology solves both. It combines basic principles of chemistry with the natural capabilities of the world’s best carbon removal tool, the ocean, to create the most promising solution for scalable decarbonisation — cost-effectively and at a globally-relevant scale.”

The oceans are the world’s largest reservoir of CO2 and one quarter of the world’s daily CO2 emissions are drawn down into the seas.

Equatic’s technology accelerates and amplifies this natural cycle to remove and durably store CO2. The entire removal and sequestra0tion process happens within the boundaries of an industrial carbon removal plant, enabling Equatic to precisely measure CO2 down to the gramme.

Lord John Browne, Founder, and Chairman at BeyondNetZero, and the former CEO of BP who is now the Chairman of Equatic’s Advisory Board, said, “To mitigate ongoing and accelerating climate change in the timeframe necessary to avoid irreversible consequences, we need truly disruptive carbon management technologies.

“Equatic’s breakthrough technology absorbs carbon dioxide via the oceans and has the added benefit of generating green hydrogen as a by-product. The good news is that the costs are low enough to allow unprecedented scaling and adoption globally.”

Equatic currently operates two carbon removal pilots in Los Angeles and Singapore. All of the CO2 removed from these pilots has been pre-sold, including via pre-purchase agreements with global payment solution provider, Stripe.

It expects to reach 100,000MT of carbon removal per year by 2026 and millions of MT of carbon removal for less than $100 per MT by 2028.

Sheila Remes, Boeing’s Vice President of Environmental Sustainability, said, “The aviation industry has an important role to play in global decarbonisation efforts. Reaching aviation’s sustainability goals will require a multi-faceted approach and Boeing sees immense value in Equatic’s technology.

“SAF is enormously important to reaching the commercial aviation industry’s net zero by 2050 goal, and we are excited to partner with Equatic on both green hydrogen feedstock and carbon dioxide removal.”

Boeing recently released its Cascade Climate Impact Model for public use. The data modeling tool, which identifies the effects of a range of sustainability solutions to reduce aviation’s carbon emissions, is accessible on Boeing’s new Sustainable Aerospace Together hub, www.sustainabilitytogether.aero.

Equatic emerges from UCLA with over $30m in initial funding including grants and equity investments from organisations such as the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, the Anthony and Jeanne Pritzker Family Foundation, the Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment, the National Science Foundation, YouWeb Incubator, The Nicholas Endowment, Singapore’s Temasek Foundation, PUB: Singapore’s National Water Agency, US Department of Energy’s Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management, and US Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E).

Equatic passes an electrical current through seawater (electrolysis) and then passes atmospheric air through the processed seawater (direct air capture); these steps trap CO2 in solid minerals and as dissolved substances that are naturally found in the oceans, ensuring that the trapped CO2 will remain stable for ‘100,000-plus’ years. Equatic uses rock to neutralise the processed seawater and ensure that the ocean’s chemistry is preserved.