Startups Begin Geoengineering the Sea

spectrum.ieee.org
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These companies are trying to make the oceans a better carbon sink
If you search up Hawaii's Keāhole Point on Google Maps, center it on your screen, and then zoom out until you can see the edges of the globe, one thing will become abundantly clear: The Pacific Ocean is very, very big.

In a few months, on this volcanic headland on Hawaii's Big Island, marine-tech startup Captura will begin pumping as much of the mighty Pacific through its pipes and tanks as it can. The company's plan is to electrochemically strip carbon dioxide out of the ocean, store or use the CO 2 , and then return the water to the sea, where it will naturally absorb more CO 2 from the air.

This article is part of our special report Top Tech 2025.

Captura is one of a cadre of startups eyeing Earth's oceans as a carbon sink ready to be harnessed. The bioengineering strategies it's deploying aim to accelerate what the oceans already do: absorb carbon emissions on a massive scale. This natural process has helped keep atmospheric CO 2 levels in check for millions of years, but it can't keep up with present-day industrial emissions. Dozens of field trials and pilot projects have begun, and in 2025, Captura and several other companies will begin scaling up their facilities.

Their approaches are as diverse as they are bold. Some groups are growing kelp forests or microalgae in the sea. Others propose pumping seawater between shallow and deep layers to move carbon around. Two strategies caught IEEE Spectrum's gaze—Captura's ocean carbon dioxide removal approach, which sucks carbon out of the sea, and ocean alkalinity enhancement, which stores carbon in the sea. Both have inspired the engineering of novel, highly efficient electrochemical systems to treat copious amounts of seawater.

Big funding entities support these ideas. The finalists for both the US $100 million XPrize for Carbon Removal and the $35 million Carbon Dioxide Removal Purchase Pilot Prize from the U.S. Department of Energy include marine-based strategies, alongside atmospheric ones.

But the…
Emily Waltz
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