Carbon Removal: Five Voices Defining the Next Decade
Profiles of the figures whose work will set the agenda for years to come.
Carbon Removal
Influence is rarely loud. The people changing this field most often work in the margins.
This piece is part of Provenance's continuing coverage of Environment. We spoke with practitioners, reviewed the recent literature, and visited the places where the work is actually being done.
What changed
Three forces converged this year: a generational shift in leadership, the collapse of one dominant paradigm, and the unexpected return of an older idea. Each on its own would have been notable. Together they have reshaped the field.
Why it matters
For readers outside the discipline, the implication is simple: assumptions you held even a year ago are probably out of date. The institutions you trusted to summarise the field are themselves still catching up.
What to read next
We have linked the primary sources where possible. The conversation is moving quickly, and the best dispatches are still coming from the people doing the work.
Key Moments
- 01
What changed
A shift in the underlying landscape reshaped how the work gets made.
- 02
Why it matters
The implications stretch from independent makers to the largest institutions.
- 03
Who to watch
A handful of voices have moved from outsider to indispensable inside the last year.
- 04
What to read next
Three pieces, one short film, and a Sunday-morning longread to round it out.
The most interesting work is happening at the edges — where craft, technology, and culture collide.
Questions Answered
Why now?
A combination of better tools and lower friction has finally made the experiment cheap enough to run at scale.
Who is leading the conversation?
A loose collective of practitioners, critics, and a surprising number of independent writers.
What should I read first?
Start with the primary sources — the rest of the discourse only makes sense once you have the texts in hand.
How do I get involved?
Subscribe to one newsletter, attend one event, and write one short response. That is the entire on-ramp.
Written by
Hiroshi Tanabe
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