Sept 12 (Reuters) - Occidental Petroleum's ( OXY )
carbon capture and sequestration unit 1PointFive said on
Thursday that the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Clean
Energy Demonstrations has committed up to $500 million to
support the development of its South Texas Direct Air Capture
(DAC) Hub.
The firm had previously received funding from BlackRock, the
world's largest asset manager, for Stratos, its DAC facility
that's under construction in Odessa, Texas.
Occidental's first large-scale DAC facility represents a
pivotal economic trial for a technology that the International
Energy Agency says will play a key role for global industrial
decarbonization, despite its high costs in initial tests.
The total award value from the OCED for the facility
could be raised to $650 million for the development of an
expanded regional carbon network in South Texas, according to a
release from Occidental.
The hub's initial carbon dioxide removal capacity of 500,000
metric tons per year could be expanded to over one million
metric tons per year, Occidental added.
Earlier this year, 1PointFive also said it would sell carbon
credits to companies such as AT&T ( T ) and Microsoft ( MSFT ).
These carbon credits are tradable permits that allow the
owner to emit specified amounts of greenhouse gases.