A brief scare that Microsoft might slow new carbon dioxide removal (CDR) credit purchases, suggested in several media reports, sent shockwaves through a carbon dioxide removal market it essentially built single-handedly. The scale of Microsoft’s dominance in the carbon dioxide removal market is hard to overstate. CDR credit purchases tripled over the past year, with the hyperscaler accounting for over 90% of total offtake (Figure 1). Even a hint of retreat from the market’s dominant buyer was enough to rattle project developers and reshape the near‑term CDR market outlook.
Existing contracts remain intact. But if no new deals are signed, the engine driving CDR investment, learning curves and cost reductions could be significantly affected. Enverus Intelligence® Research (EIR) analysis shows CDR credit sales push project returns from strong to exceptional, especially when layered with tax incentives and, in some cases, renewable energy credits. However, with Microsoft representing most of the purchases in this carbon dioxide removal market, that revenue stream now carries real counterparty risk and heightens uncertainty around the broader CDR market outlook.
The same dynamic applies to direct air capture (DAC), one of the most capital‑intensive forms of carbon capture technology. EIR’s analysis of the Stratos facility, 1PointFive’s commercial‑scale direct air capture plant in West Texas, shows project value is tied directly to CDR contracting and the evolving CDR market outlook. For Stratos and similar assets, carbon capture technology economics depend on a blend of CDR credits, federal incentives and, in some cases, renewable energy credits or other policy support. When a single company is effectively the market for CDR credits, even a temporary purchasing pause becomes a structural demand shock for direct air capture developers.
More broadly, the carbon dioxide removal market is still in its infancy relative to compliance carbon markets or voluntary renewable energy credits, but its role in long‑term environmental sustainability strategies is growing. Corporates increasingly view high‑quality CDR credits as a complement to emissions reductions, not a substitute, particularly in hard‑to‑abate sectors. This reinforces the need for a more diversified buyer base so that no single entity can dictate price discovery, project timing or the CDR market outlook.
In this context, environmental sustainability objectives intersect directly with capital allocation. Project sponsors, financiers and offtakers must evaluate how dependent their returns are on one buyer’s procurement strategy and how resilient their portfolios are to shifts in the carbon dioxide removal market. As more players enter, including industrials, financials and technology firms, we expect a gradual broadening of demand for CDR credits and a more stable CDR market outlook, especially for projects that integrate robust carbon capture technology and direct air capture solutions.
Research Highlights:
- RIN Repricing – RVO Finalization and Iran War Reshape Returns – This report analyzes the impact of finalized 2026‑27 renewable volume obligations (RVOs) and the Iran war on renewable identification number prices and renewable fuel returns. We also examine how refiner RVO exposure has shifted and what it means for margins, including interactions with renewable energy credits and broader environmental sustainability targets.
- Finalized 2026‑27 RVOs – Higher Volumes Offset by Import Restriction Deferral – This report details key changes from the final Renewable Fuel Standard Set 2 rule released March 27 and their impact on biofuel markets. We discuss how higher mandated volumes, import dynamics and renewable energy credits influence project economics and the emerging CDR market outlook for low‑carbon liquid fuels.
- Ethanol With CCS – Rail Gains Momentum as Summit Stalls – This report examines the opportunity to integrate CCS into ethanol facilities, highlighting optimized economic pathways, strategies to mitigate execution risk and the potential for additional revenue through carbon dioxide removal credits. We assess how pairing bio‑based feedstocks with carbon capture technology can generate durable CDR credits, support environmental sustainability goals and diversify revenue beyond commodity fuel sales.
Across these themes, EIR continues to track how carbon capture technology, direct air capture and related CDR credits evolve alongside traditional policy tools like RVOs and renewable energy credits. Together, these mechanisms will shape the long‑term carbon dioxide removal market, corporate decarbonization strategies and the global CDR market outlook.
DID YOU KNOW?
The ocean absorbs 25%‑30% of all human‑emitted CO2, making it the planet’s largest natural carbon sink. It also captures more than 90% of the excess heat generated by greenhouse gas emissions, underscoring its central role in environmental sustainability and the urgency of scaling both emissions reductions and carbon dioxide removal.
Key Takeaways
1. What did Microsoft’s potential pullback reveal about the CDR market?
It exposed how dependent the carbon dioxide removal market is on a single buyer. With Microsoft accounting for more than 90% of CDR credit purchases, even rumors of slowing demand created immediate uncertainty for project developers and investors.
2. Why does buyer concentration matter for project economics, especially for DAC?
Because project returns rely heavily on CDR credit sales layered with tax incentives and policy support. When one company effectively sets demand, a pause in purchasing can quickly turn into a structural shock, especially for capital‑intensive technologies like direct air capture.
3. What is needed to create a more stable CDR market going forward?
A broader, more diversified buyer base. As more corporates, industrials and financial players adopt CDR credits as a complement to emissions reductions, risk will spread, price discovery will improve and long‑term investment confidence will strengthen.
About Enverus Intelligence® | Research
Enverus Intelligence® | Research, Inc. (EIR) is a subsidiary of Enverus that publishes energy-sector research focused on the oil, natural gas, power and renewable industries. EIR publishes reports including asset and company valuations, resource assessments, technical evaluations, and macro-economic forecasts and helps make intelligent connections for energy industry participants, service companies, and capital providers worldwide. See additional disclosures here.