Courtesy of SvanteCarbon capture investors have no reason to worry about the tax credit debates in Congress, the head of a leading company in that industry told Semafor. Svante, a Canadian startup, this week opened the world’s first “gigafactory” for producing carbon capture filters, a technology it plans to sell to a wide range of industrial emitters. The $145 million project is a bit of a gamble, CEO Claude Letourneau said: “We’re still not out of the valley of death.” The company was able to raise money for the facility “without a purchase order,” he said, on the conviction that its technology will soon be highly valued in a world that restricts CO2 emissions and puts a monetary value on their capture. That includes a US tax credit, 45Q, that was among the few to escape cuts this week by House Republican budget planners. “I have no concerns whatsoever about the US market, or any signs from Trump or anyone else that 45Q will go away,” Letourneau said. In the meantime, the company is proactively building its first batch of customers, by taking equity stakes in nascent carbon capture projects. Demand for carbon capture tech is moving more slowly than Letourneau hoped for a few years ago, and for one big potential customer pool — gas plants running AI data centers — more engineering work is needed to make carbon capture sufficiently cost-efficient. “We’re still in market push mode,” he said, whereas the company planned to be in “pull mode” by now. But he still expects the new gigafactory’s capacity to be sold out within five years. |