KEY POINTS
  • Eric Toone, a technical lead investor at Breakthrough Energy Ventures, understands that some see carbon capture technology as a "moral hazard," giving companies a loophole to zero out their emissions without actually fundamentally restructuring their operations, but he doesn't buy the argument as a reason to stay away from the tech.
  • In the United States, there is a voluntary market for companies to pay to capture their carbon, but there is not any government regulation or a federally mandated price on carbon.
  • While carbon capture is still expensive, the price will come down, according to Toone, who's signed off on five carbon capture deals for Breakthrough Energy Ventures.
06 January 2022, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Wismar: Smoke rises from chimneys of wood-processing industrial plants at the seaport of Wismar. Photo: Jens Büttner/dpa-Zentralbild/ZB (Photo by Jens Büttner/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Eric Toone is a technical lead investor for Bill Gates' climate tech investment firm, Breakthrough Energy Ventures. He's one of two people who has to sign off on any deal for it to get funded, and he has signed off on five investments in carbon capture technology, four of which have been publicly announced.

Carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels is a primary source of human-caused climate change. Carbon capture is a set of methods — some time-tested, some experimental — for reducing carbon dioxide emissions either by removing them at the source or from the atmosphere. (The term "carbon" is often used as shorthand for carbon dioxide, CO2, in discussions about capture and sequestration technology.)