SUNYA Energy

Captura opens new Direct Ocean Capture pilot plant in Hawaii

February 10, 2025
SUNYA Summary
- Captura has launched a new pilot plant in Hawaii with the capacity to capture 1,000 tons of CO2 annually. - The facility, located in Kona, was developed in partnership with Equinor and represents a significant milestone for Direct Ocean Capture (DOC) technology. - DOC technology employs the ocean to remove excess CO2 from the atmosphere, enhancing its natural carbon absorption capabilities. - This method leverages oceanic processes, requires no feedstock, and generates no waste, providing a scalable and efficient solution for atmospheric CO2 removal. - Captura's innovation combines electrodialysis and gas extraction with readily available water and gas handling systems. - The Hawaii pilot validates these technologies at a scale that can be replicated in larger facilities. - Captura plans to design its first large-scale commercial facility for capturing tens of thousands of tons of CO2 annually. - The CEO of Captura emphasized the scalability of their solution and the rapid installation of the Hawaii facility. - DOC technology can be applied in various climate and industrial contexts, with extracted CO2 usable for carbon dioxide removal and as a feedstock for renewable fuels. - In Hawaii, captured CO2 will be supplied to local industries, aiding in the reduction of their carbon footprint. - The facility operates at the Hawai'i Ocean Science and Technology Park, managed by the Natural Energy Laboratory of Hawaii Authority, which supports local economic development and job creation. - Captura's technology prioritizes ocean ecosystem protection, producing no waste or new substances in the ocean while removing excess CO2. - Captura was founded at Caltech and has received support from various organizations for its innovative carbon removal approach.
PRESS RELEASE
Captura opens new Direct Ocean Capture pilot plant in Hawaii:

Capable of capturing 1,000 tons of CO2 annually, the facility readies Captura's technology for large-scale deployment

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 6, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Captura, a California-based carbon removal company, today announced the start of operations at its latest pilot plant, capable of capturing 1,000 tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) annually. 

Located in Kona, Hawaii, and developed in partnership with multinational energy company Equinor, the facility marks a major milestone in the commercialization of Direct Ocean Capture (DOC) technology – a process that leverages the ocean to remove excess CO2 from the atmosphere. As the third and final pilot in Captura's technology development program, this facility readies the company's DOC technology for deployment in large, commercial systems worldwide.

The ocean is one of the world's largest carbon sinks, absorbing approximately 30 per cent of global CO2 emissions. DOC technology works by extracting CO2 directly from the upper ocean, thereby enhancing the ocean's natural ability to absorb additional CO2 from the atmosphere. By leveraging natural oceanic processes, requiring no feedstock, and generating no waste, the DOC approach to carbon removal offers an inherently scalable and efficient way to remove vast quantities of atmospheric CO2.

Captura's DOC technology achieves this by combining innovations in electrodialysis and gas extraction with widely available water and gas handling systems. These modular technologies have been successfully demonstrated at two prior pilot plants in Los Angeles, and the Hawaii pilot will now validate them at the scale and performance level that can be replicated in larger plants. Captura is proceeding with initial design work for its first large-scale commercial facility, with an expected annual capture capacity of tens of thousands of tons of CO2.

"Captura's journey from lab-scale testing to our third technology demonstration in just three years is a testament to the scalability of our solution," said Steve Oldham, CEO of Captura. "This facility in Hawaii is the last milestone before we move to widespread commercial deployment of DOC technology. Its rapid installation and commissioning in just over two months demonstrates how our simple, modular design is ready to be scaled quickly to help address the urgent climate and energy challenge."

DOC is a flexible technology that can serve a variety of climate and industrial use cases. The CO2 extracted at DOC facilities is delivered as a measurable stream of pipeline-purity CO2 gas, which can then be directly sequestered to create carbon dioxide removal, used as a feedstock to produce renewable fuels, or utilized by industries that require CO2. In Hawaii, the CO2 captured at the Captura plant will be provided to a range of local industries, such as aquaculture operators, to help reduce the carbon intensity of their operations.

Captura's facility is operating at the Hawai'i Ocean Science and Technology (HOST) Park, a leading ocean research facility run by the Natural Energy Laboratory of Hawaii Authority (NELHA). NELHA has administered the park in Kona for more than 50 years, generating almost $150 million annually for Hawaii's economy and creating over 600 jobs statewide. NELHA runs a comprehensive environmental monitoring program at HOST Park, which complements Captura's own practices and research on ocean health.

Captura's technology is designed to be highly scalable and cost-effective while prioritizing the protection of the ocean ecosystem. The process produces zero waste or by-products and introduces nothing new into the ocean—it simply removes excess CO2, which the atmosphere then naturally replaces.

To learn more about Captura, visit www.capturacorp.com.

About Captura:
Captura is a Direct Ocean Capture company headquartered in Pasadena, California. Captura combines innovative technology with the natural carbon removal powers of the ocean to remove CO2 from the atmosphere at large scale and low-cost, providing a critical capability in the fight against climate change. Captura was founded at Caltech and its solution has been supported by the Carbon Removal XPRIZE, the Department of Energy's ARPA-E, and Frontier Climate.

SOURCE Captura