Coupling acid neutralization and resource recovery to scale ocean alkalinity enhancement
DOI:
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Abstract
Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement (OAE) is a promising carbon dioxide removal (CDR) strategy with the theoretical potential to sequester gigatons of atmospheric CO₂ each year. Electrochemical OAE—where seawater alkalinity is increased by removing hydrochloric acid (HCl)—has attracted particular interest, but the viability of this approach at climate-relevant scales hinges on the development of low-cost, carbon-neutral strategies for HCl disposal. Here, we demonstrate a two-step bench-scale process that addresses this challenge by first neutralizing HCl using common mafic and ultramafic rocks, and then recovering valuable products from the resulting solutions. This process can yield co-products such as amorphous silica and nickel/cobalt hydroxides, while converting HCl into a saline solution that can be discharged to the ocean without reversing alkalinity gains. A technoeconomic case study in Washington State, USA, estimates the cost of acid neutralization at < $25 per tonne of CO₂ removed via OAE, with the potential for future net profitability as co-product purities improve.
Accounting >>Experiments and field trials >>Geochemical CDR >>Qualitative research >>Socioeconomic impacts >>Supporting infrastructure >>
Carbon to Sea Initiative
Yale Center for Natural Carbon Capture
R.D. holds a minor equity stake in CREW Carbon Inc. J.A.R.K. is a founder of CREW Carbon Inc. and holds an equity stake. All other authors declare no competing interests.
August 6, 2025