Key takeaways:
Brussels, 25 February 2025: Today, the European Commission published its Clean Industrial Deal (CID), aiming to bring together climate and competitiveness under one overarching growth strategy. Last month’s Competitiveness Compass gave the carbon dioxide removal (CDR) sector a reason to hope for a roadmap with concrete proposals for the sector. Yet, despite acknowledging the urgent need to create a business case for permanent CDR, the CID fails to propose tangible deployment incentives for CDR scale up in the short and medium term.
Promising acknowledgement of the need to build a business case for permanent removals
Building on the net 90% emissions reduction target for 2040 expected in March, the CID emphasises the importance of long-term policy certainty. The CID’s emphasis on EU-made clean manufacturing signals Europe’s ambition to become a clean tech powerhouse — an ambition that should also extend to championing CDR. To that end, we welcome CID’s explicit recognition of the need to build a business case for permanent CDR to compensate for residual emissions from hard-to-abate sectors.
The CID recognises a €480 billion annual funding gap for the wider clean transition, which it proposes to address in part through the creation of new initiatives, and leveraging support through multiple existing channels:
However, it remains unclear whether and by how much these commitments will specifically target CDR.
Concerning lack of clear CDR roadmap threatens EU climate and competitiveness goals
The CID stresses the need for certainty and predictability in industrial policy. Yet, by mainly focusing on ETS integration, it ends up underdelivering those needs. An exclusive focus on long term compliance limits the ability for a wide portfolio of removals to come forward in the EU. There is a clear need for near-term interventions to support early CDR deployment and get innovative projects off the ground.
"The EU risks lagging behind the US, Canada and Switzerland, which have already mobilised significant financial support for CDR," said Rodica Avornic, Policy Director at Carbon Gap. "With compliance measures only taking effect in at least 5 years, the EU urgently needs interim deployment incentives to scale up the CDR sector and be competitive. Several upcoming initiatives under the Clean Industrial Deal – such as the Industrial Decarbonisation Accelerator Act and the revision of procurement rules – must be leveraged to achieve effective CDR scale-up.”
Looking forward: opportunities for CDR
Several CID initiatives must be leveraged to strengthen EU support for CDR:
As the US steps back from its climate ambitions, the EU should not miss out on the opportunity to assume global leadership by putting CDR on the path to success. Failing to act now would sideline a sector critical to both EU climate goals and economic growth. By 2050, CDR could unlock a €220 billion annual market, create 670,000 high-quality jobs, drive innovation, and solidify Europe’s position as a global leader in the clean economy. The implementation of the Clean Industrial Deal is an opportunity to get this right.
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NOTES FOR EDITORS
Carbon Gap is an independent, philanthropically funded non-profit organisation focused on rapidly and responsibly scaling up carbon dioxide removal in Europe, as an important complement to emissions reductions.
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