The Houston Chronicle, November 8,2022
By: Kyra Buckley
Occidental Petroleum hopes to bring its bold plan of developing direct air carbon capture to a famous ranch in South Texas, the Houston-based company said this week.
Oxy and 1PointFive, its subsidiary focused on carbon capture, said they’ve agreed to lease more than 100,000 acres in Kleberg County for potential development of up to 30 direct air capture plants. The lease is with King Ranch, the historic, 825,000-acre ranch south of Corpus Christi, and includes access to land to store captured carbon underground in geologic reservoirs.
The announcement builds on Occidental’s net-zero goals that rely on traditional carbon capture technology that grabs carbon emissions from industrial operations and direct air capture plants that suck CO² from the atmosphere. While most public oil and gas companies have established plans to reduce emissions, Occidental was the first large U.S. oil company to aim for net-zero emissions from everything it extracts and sells by 2050.
Vicki Hollub, Occidental’s CEO, said the King Ranch plants would be the largest deployment of direct air carbon capture in the world.
“We believe large-scale DAC (direct air capture), which is an innovative engineered CO2 removal solution, will play an important role in helping organizations and nations reduce their net CO2 emissions and provide the scale necessary to make a difference in addressing climate change globally,” Hollub said in a statement.
Occidental Petroleum said this year it planned to build 70 direct air carbon capture facilities by 2035. But the company told investors in March that if the federal government increased financial support, it could build as many as 135 facilities in the same amount of time. That support came with the Inflation Reduction Act, which became law in August and increased tax credits for direct air capture to $180 per metric ton of carbon stored underground.
Occidental said the direct air capture facilities at the King Ranch could remove up to 30 million metric tons of carbon dioxide per year. The leased land has the potential to store up to 3 billion metric tons of CO² in geologic reservoirs, according to the company.
Oxy broke ground on its first direct air capture plant in the Permian Basin in West Texas over the summer. That project is expected to be operational by the end of 2024 with the ability to capture 500,000 tons of carbon dioxide per year.