News
A collection of announcements and media coverage that feature our work. Here you’ll find updates we’ve shared and places our efforts have been highlighted in the broader climate and science community.
As Temperatures Rise, So Does Pressure to Engineer the Ocean
“The verification step has to be non-profit, and it has to be separate from your money-making scheme,” says Ho, who co-founded [C]Worthy, a nonprofit that makes open-source software to quantify the efficacy and side effects of marine carbon removal. “As ocean biogeochemists, if we have the inclination and we have the skills, then it behooves us to work on it.”
VirtualiZarr: Create virtual Zarr stores using xarray syntax
[C]Worthy staff scientist for data analytics, Tom Nicholas, Ph.D., leads a discussion with Pangeo about VirtualiZarr, his tool developed to overcome some limitations of the “kerchunk” idea in wrangling big datasets like those being used to build software at [C]Worthy.
AltaSea at the Port of Los Angeles | Carbon Management Webinar
AltaSea at the Port of Los Angeles President and CEO Terry Tamminen leads a conversation with [C]Worthy Co-Founder and CTO Alicia Karspeck and others on Ocean Carbon Dioxide Removal.
Alicia Karspeck and AirMiners: How to Build an MRV Ecosystem
MRV is the fulcrum of all things CDR so we're having an event centered on the growing MRV ecosystem and how everyone plays together. How does data flow, what are the needed inputs and outputs of each, where are the challenges, overlaps, and opportunities for optimization of the whole process?
Worth: Tom Kalil’s Renaissance Philanthropy Recruits Wealthy Science Funders
“These projects are also challenging to do in an academic setting because they require a larger group of people than you have in a single academic lab…So, what they proposed was to create non-profit science startups.”
Effectiveness of mCDR: Measurement, reporting, and verification of ocean alkalinity enhancement.
Experts discuss the importance of rigorous MRV, entities potentially responsible for funding and conducting MRV, existing ocean observing infrastructure and modeling capabilities, and implementation readiness.
Will stashing more CO2 in the ocean help slow climate change?
‘CDR can be thought of like “a time machine,” David Ho, an oceanographer at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, wrote last year in Nature. Stripping some of the CO2 out of the atmosphere would be like returning to an earlier time with lower concentrations.
Oceanography Professors Transform a Research Tool into a Startup That’s Sucking CO2 from Seawater
"As the world hurtles toward dangerously warmer temperatures, international experts advise that carbon removal will be essential to avoiding the worst climate outcomes.”
A Growing Problem: Is It Too Late To Plant Trees for Climate Change?
[C]Worthy Chief Science Officer David Ho is interviewed by The Weather Network to answer questions about mCDR, carbon emissions reduction, and planting trees.
Ocean-Climate Solutions Innovation Exchange | MRV for Ocean-Based CDR: Modeling and Observations
The third webinar in a series focused on current innovations in Monitoring, Reporting, and Verification (MRV) for marine carbon dioxide removal (mCDR).
CBC: How effective a climate solution is removing CO2 from the atmosphere?
“It doesn’t make sense to use CCS to prolong our use of fossil fuels, especially to produce electricity,” said David Ho, professor at University of Hawaii and senior researcher at Columbia University. “The argument in favor of enhanced oil recovery is often that if they weren’t using this captured CO2, they’d be using some other CO2, but I don’t think you can call anything where you’re getting more oil out of the ground to burn a climate solution.”
Isometric and [C]Worthy partner to advance marine carbon dioxide removal research
Isometric is partnering with [C]Worthy—a non-profit “Focused Research Organization” that is building C-Star (Computational Systems for Tracking Ocean Carbon).
Will carbon dioxide removal tech help or hinder climate targets?
David Ho on the promise and challenges of scaled carbon removal in this article by NewScientist.
Time Magazine: The U.S. Energy Department Is Spending $36 Million On Ocean Carbon-Capture Research
"Matt Long, a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and director of [C]Worthy, a nonprofit aiming to help build tools to measure and verify ocean carbon removal, is working on a project that received about $3.9 million in ARPA-E’s announcement today.”
Sea Change: Can we alter the chemistry of the ocean to save the climate?
Our CEO, Matt Long, talks about [C]Worthy, ocean alkalinity enhancement, and MRV on this podcast with Solve for X.
Sea Change Radio: David Ho on Carbon Offsets: Much Ado About Nothing?
"Carbon offsets are often touted as a solution to humanity’s bad habit of emitting an awful lot of CO₂. But how many of us actually know what things like carbon offsets and carbon dioxide removal are all about?”
Carbon Herald: New Research Will Assess Efficiency Of Ocean Alkalinity In Removing CO₂ From The Air
"'This project represents the first time an alkalinity release will be conducted along with the dual tracer technique and allows us the opportunity to determine the movement of CO2 between the ocean and atmosphere and track the evolution of an ocean alkalinity enhancement…”
BBC Radio 4 Inside Science: Interview with David Ho
As we emit CO₂ into the atmosphere, a significant amount - around a third - is taken in by the oceans. With growing interest in carbon removal interventions, ocean scientist Dr David T. Ho tells Gaia about undertaking an exciting experiment.
This Is CDR Ep. 81: [C]Worthy - Safe, Effective, Verifiable Tools for Marine CDR - Dr. Matthew Long
This Is CDR OpenAir welcomes [C]Worthy Co-Founder and Executive Director Matthew Long to discuss the new organization's vital mission to build software that supports multi-scale oceanographic modeling and data integration for quantifying the efficacy and ecological impacts of marine CDR.
Salon: Do carbon removal strategies actually work?
‘The problem is, ocean uptake is relatively slow, compared to our rate of emission,' Long told Salon in a phone interview.