Litcius/Paper detail

The Verification Challenge of Marine Carbon Dioxide Removal

Katja Fennel

2025Annual Review of Marine Science7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

It is increasingly obvious that, even when reaching net-zero emissions, removal of anthropogenic CO 2 from the atmosphere will be required. Some ocean-based removal technologies, while not proven for routine operation at scale, show promise. All of these rely on inducing a flux of CO 2 from the atmosphere into the ocean that is directly attributable to the removal intervention. Crucial for the economic viability of these technologies is the quantification of the cumulative net air–sea flux of CO 2 that an intervention can verifiably deliver. Because this flux is the difference between a realistic case with and a hypothetical case without intervention, it cannot be determined by observation alone—one must rely on a combination of informative observations and skillful models. Major uncertainties in the quantification of net CO 2 uptake include the removal of seawater with a dissolved inorganic carbon deficit from direct contact with the atmosphere and the inevitable rebalancing of carbon among Earth's mobile carbon pools.

Topics & Concepts

Atmosphere (unit)SeawaterCarbon dioxideEnvironmental scienceCarbon fibersFlux (metallurgy)Carbon dioxide removalCarbon fluxIntervention (counseling)Environmental engineeringOceanographyChemistryComputer scienceMeteorologyEcologyGeologyEcosystemBiologyOrganic chemistryPsychiatryPhysicsPsychologyAlgorithmComposite numberGlobal Energy and Sustainability ResearchCarbon Dioxide Capture TechnologiesMarine and Offshore Engineering Studies