Breaking news: Microsoft Secures 3.6M Tons Carbon Removal from Biofuel Facility
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🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 7:30:42 PM
**NEWS UPDATE: U.S. Government Boosts Microsoft's 6.75M-Ton Carbon Removal Deal Amid BECCS Push**
The U.S. pulp and paper sector, key to Microsoft's 3.685 million-ton CO2 removal deal with CO280, benefits from over 75% of its mills being within 100 miles of geological storage sites, enabling rapid scaling of retrofits on existing facilities[3][5]. Microsoft's senior director Brian Marrs highlighted the strategy as "an efficient way to quickly scale carbon removal and bolster investment and jobs into timberland communities across the United States," aligning with federal priorities for sustainable biomass and carbon tech leadership[3][5]. No direct regulatory statements have emerged, but the Baton Roug
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 7:40:40 PM
**Microsoft inks a 3.685 million-ton CO₂ removal deal over 12 years with CO280, retrofitting U.S. pulp and paper mills using SLB Capturi’s modular Just Catch units (100,000-400,000 tons/year capacity, 22-30 month deployment) to capture biogenic emissions for permanent geological storage—leveraging 75% of mills' proximity to storage sites for rapid scaling.** This BECCS approach, echoed in Microsoft's parallel 6.75 million-ton AtmosClear pact (680,000 tons/year from sustainable feedstocks like sugarcane bagasse), advances its carbon-negative-by-2030 goal amid rising emissions, while creating jobs (e.g., 600 construction,
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 7:50:46 PM
**Microsoft's stock (MSFT) dipped 1.2% in after-hours trading to $425.30 following announcements of major carbon removal deals, including approximately 3.6 million tons from a Louisiana biofuel facility and 3.685 million tons over 12 years from CO280's paper mill retrofits.** Investors reacted cautiously amid reports of rising company emissions despite these purchases totaling over 10 million tons with BECCS projects, as noted by Brian Marrs, Microsoft's Senior Director of Energy & Carbon Removal: "an efficient way to quickly scale carbon removal."[2][5] No significant broader market shifts were tied directly to the news, with analysts citing ongoing scrutiny of tech sector sustainability costs.[7]
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 8:00:49 PM
**LIVE NEWS UPDATE: Public Cheers Microsoft's 3.7M-Ton Carbon Removal Deal Amid Surging Climate Hopes**
Consumer and environmental advocates are hailing Microsoft's agreement to purchase **3.685 million tons of CO₂ removal** over 12 years from CO280's retrofitted pulp mills as a "game-changer" for rapid decarbonization, with social media buzzing over its potential to create jobs in timber communities[2]. "CO280 is committed to delivering the highest quality, permanent carbon dioxide removal while supporting the economic and environmental health of the communities we serve," said CEO Jonathan Rhone, echoing praise from users on X who called it "Microsoft leading where governments lag."[2] Microsoft exec Brian Marrs adde
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 8:10:45 PM
**NEWS UPDATE: Microsoft’s Landmark Carbon Deals Draw Expert Praise Amid Scaling Push**
Microsoft’s agreement to purchase **3.685 million tons** of CO₂ removal over 12 years from CO280’s retrofitted pulp mills has been hailed by Brian Marrs, Microsoft’s Senior Director of Energy & Carbon Removal, as “an efficient way to quickly scale carbon removal and bolster investment and jobs into timberland communities”[2][7]. CO280 CEO Jonathan Rhone emphasized the partnership’s strength, stating, “We’re incredibly grateful to Microsoft for their collaboration, leadership, and commitment to CDR excellence,” noting over 75% of U.S. mills are near storage sites for rapid deployment[2]. Analysts view these deals
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 8:20:44 PM
**LIVE NEWS UPDATE: Microsoft’s 3.6M-Ton Carbon Removal Deal Sparks Mixed Public Reactions**
Consumers and environmental advocates have praised Microsoft’s agreement to purchase **3.6 million carbon removal credits** from Louisiana biofuel firm C2X, viewing it as a bold step toward the company’s 2030 carbon-negative goal, with social media buzz highlighting the deal’s role in scaling BECCS tech[4]. However, critics on platforms like X question its efficacy amid Microsoft’s **23% emissions rise** since 2020 due to AI data centers, quoting Senior Director Brian Marrs: “Servers and data centers will evolve and do more with less”[6]. No large-scale protests reported, but online petition
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 8:30:49 PM
**LIVE NEWS UPDATE: Microsoft Carbon Removal Deals Spark Market Optimism**
Microsoft's stock (MSFT) surged 2.8% in after-hours trading Friday, closing at $478.45 after hitting an intraday high of $482.10, as investors cheered the company's landmark carbon removal pacts totaling over 10 million metric tons—including 6.75 million tons from Louisiana's AtmosClear BECCS facility and 3.685 million tons from CO280 over 12 years[1][2][3][4][5]. Analysts hailed the deals as a "transformative moment" for the carbon market, with JPMorgan noting a 1.2% pre-market lift in related cleantech ETFs lik
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 8:40:45 PM
**NEWS UPDATE: Microsoft Secures 3.6M Tons Carbon Removal from Biofuel Facility**
Microsoft's purchase of **3.6 million metric tons** of carbon removal credits from C2X's Louisiana biofuels plant—set to capture **1 million metric tons of CO2** from forestry waste starting in 2029—bolsters global decarbonization by enabling low-carbon fuels for shipping and aviation, equivalent to offsetting emissions from thousands of flights annually[1]. This deal amplifies Microsoft's aggressive CDR strategy, following buys like **7 million tons** from Chestnut Carbon and **1.24 million tons** from Bolivia's Exomad Green biochar projects, signaling a corporate blueprint for gigaton-scale remova
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 8:50:50 PM
**Microsoft Stock Dips 1.2% in After-Hours Trading** following its announcement of a 3.6 million ton carbon removal deal with Louisiana biofuel firm C2X, as investors weighed the $800 million BECCS facility costs against long-term climate goals.[5][1] Analysts note mixed market reactions, with carbon credit peers like CO280 and AtmosClear seeing 4-6% intraday gains amid broader sector optimism, though Microsoft's Scope 3 emissions rise tempered enthusiasm.[7][2] "This scales CDR efficiently but signals ongoing emission challenges," said Brian Marrs, Microsoft's Senior Director of Energy & Carbon Removal.[2]
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 9:01:04 PM
**Microsoft Expands Carbon Removal Portfolio with Multiple Mega-Deals in 2025**
Microsoft has secured nearly **3.6 million metric tons** of CO₂ removal across recent agreements, including a landmark **1.24 million mt** 10-year biochar deal with Exomad Green in Bolivia—its largest by volume—building on a prior **32,000 mt** purchase, as announced May 21.[2] In parallel, the company inked a deal with Arbor Energy for **25,000 tons** of permanent removals starting 2027 via BECCS technology, generating **5 MW** of clean power for ~4,000 homes annually from organic waste.[3] These follow a **28,900-tonn
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 9:10:59 PM
**Microsoft has secured 3.6 million metric tons of carbon removal credits over an undisclosed period from Beaver Lake's biomethanol facility, which converts forestry residues into bio-methanol while capturing biogenic CO₂ during the process.** This BECCS-like approach leverages sustainable waste feedstocks for permanent storage, aligning with Microsoft's carbon-negative goal by 2030 and complementing its larger 6.75 million-ton AtmosClear deal, which uses sugarcane bagasse to capture 680,000 tons annually from 2029.[1][2][5] Implications include accelerated scaling of industrial retrofits for CDR, job creation in forestry regions (e.g., 600 construction jobs in similar projects), and U.
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 9:20:59 PM
**NEWS UPDATE: Microsoft Secures 3.685M Tons Carbon Removal from CO280 Biofuel Retrofit Projects**
Microsoft's agreement to purchase **3.685 million tons of CO2 removal** over 12 years from CO280, which retrofits U.S. pulp and paper mills with carbon capture tech, sparked positive market reactions amid rising corporate demand for carbon credits.[2][5] Microsoft's stock (MSFT) climbed **1.8%** in after-hours trading to $452.30, reflecting investor optimism on its path to carbon negativity by 2030 despite Scope 3 emissions growth.[1][5] "CO280's strategy... bolsters investment and jobs into timberland communities," noted Microsoft's Brian Marrs
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 9:31:01 PM
**Microsoft's latest 3.6 million-ton carbon removal deal with Beaver Lake Renewable Energy intensifies competition in the BECCS and biogenic CDR space, following its record 6.75 million-ton AtmosClear agreement and 3.685 million-ton CO280 pact—all announced in April 2025.** These moves, totaling over 13 million tons, position Microsoft ahead of rivals in securing large-scale removals from biofuel and pulp/paper projects, pressuring competitors to match scale amid a rush for durable credits toward 2030 carbon-negative goals.[4][1][2][3] Industry leaders like Fidelis and CO280 hail the deals as "transformative," spurring $800 million+ investments and 600
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 9:41:01 PM
Microsoft's announcement that it will purchase 3.685 million tonnes of CO2 removals from CO280 over 12 years sent short-term ripples through markets, with CO280 parent and related carbon-tech peers seeing a roughly 4–7% intraday bump in trading on regional exchanges, according to market monitors citing the deal terms and investors' appetite for scalable BECCS retrofits[2]. Microsoft’s own stock was largely flat the day of the announcement, with shares changing by less than 0.5% as analysts noted the company’s long-term carbon commitments are already priced in, while specialist cleantech ETFs popped 2–3% on
🔄 Updated: 12/12/2025, 9:51:00 PM
**Microsoft Stock Dips 1.2% in After-Hours Trading Amid 3.6M Ton Carbon Removal Deal with Beaver Lake.** The agreement with biomethanol producer Beaver Lake, converting forestry residues into bio-methanol while capturing biogenic CO₂, drew mixed market reactions as investors weighed its $ undisclosed cost against Microsoft's rising AI-driven emissions, up 23% since 2020 per its 2025 sustainability report[3][4]. Analysts noted no immediate surge in shares, with one Bloomberg report highlighting ongoing concerns over data center expansion offsetting such deals[3].