Direct Air Capture (Technology Briefing) – Geoengineering Monitor
Life Cycle Assessment of Direct Air Carbon Capture and Storage with Low- Carbon Energy Sources | Environmental Science & Technology
What is direct air carbon capture and storage (DACS)? - Drax Global
Direct Air Capture (“DAC”) - CO2Rail Company
WEEKLY SUMMARY (13 MARCH - 19 MARCH 2023) - WEEK#4
The Morrison government wants to suck CO₂ out of the atmosphere. Here are 7 ways to do it
What is Direct Air Capture? (part 1) | by Christophe Jospe | Medium
Direct air capture: process technology, techno-economic and socio-political challenges - Energy & Environmental Science (RSC Publishing) DOI:10.1039/D1EE03523A
Airbus and major airlines partner to explore direct air carbon capture technology - Green Car Congress
Delaying carbon dioxide removal in the European Union puts climate targets at risk | Nature Communications
Direct Air Carbon Capture and Sequestration: How It Works and How It Could Contribute to Climate-Change Mitigation - ScienceDirect
Bio-Energy with Carbon Capture and Sequestration (BECCS) | EARTH 104: Earth and the Environment (Development)
New IEAGHG report: Global Assessment of DACCS Costs, Scale and Potential - BLOG
Direct air capture: could this new technology save us from climate change? - Climate & Environment at Imperial
Using carbon removal solutions to fight climate change | Climeworks
Direct air carbon capture and storage for aviation, explained | Airbus
DAC 101: What you need to know about Direct Air Capture
Audi partnering with Climeworks on CO2 direct air capture and storage - Green Car Congress
Direct Air Capture and Carbon Sequestration (DACCS) | EARTH 104: Earth and the Environment (Development)
Direct Air Capture & the Climate Long Game - CleanTechnica
Direct Air Carbon Capture and Sequestration: How It Works and How It Could Contribute to Climate-Change Mitigation - ScienceDirect
The Economics of Direct Air Carbon Capture and Storage - Global CCS Institute
Direct action: Carbon capture gears up for climate battle
Direct CO2 capture machines could use 'a quarter of global energy' in 2100