Microsoft has signed one of the largest-ever carbon removal agreements through forests. The tech giant will purchase 4.8 million tons of high-quality carbon removal credits over 10 years from Anew Climate and Aurora Sustainable Lands. The credits come from improved forest management (IFM) projects in the U.S., helping Microsoft get closer to its goal of becoming carbon negative by 2030.
This new deal highlights Microsoft’s leadership in corporate climate action and growing interest in nature-based carbon removal. As climate commitments rise, so does demand for trusted, measurable carbon removal.
Betting on Trees: Microsoft’s Commitment to Forest Carbon Removal
Forest carbon removal is a key nature-based solution for fighting climate change. It mainly involves better forest management, afforestation, and reforestation. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says nature-based solutions, like restoring forests, could cut emissions by 30%. This is essential to keep global warming below 1.5°C.
A 2024 report by the Forest Trends Initiative found that around 46% of voluntary carbon market transactions involved forest and land-use credits. McKinsey estimates that by 2030, forest-based carbon removal could reduce CO₂ by up to 7 gigatons each year if fully developed. This shows its crucial role in corporate climate strategies.

The agreement between Microsoft and Anew Climate spans a full decade. This long-term deal supports Anew and Aurora Sustainable Lands. It gives them the funds to manage big forest areas for carbon storage. The deal covers 4.8 million metric tons of carbon dioxide to be removed and stored from the atmosphere.
The carbon credits will come from improved forest management (IFM) projects. These efforts involve changing how forests are maintained to store more carbon. This could mean extending harvest cycles, thinning trees carefully, or protecting forests from being cleared. IFM is a nature-based solution backed by science and approved by trusted carbon standards.
Anew Climate—formerly known as Bluesource—has worked in environmental markets for more than two decades. It has helped develop over 400 IFM projects across 5 million acres in North America. Aurora Sustainable Lands manages vast forest areas in the U.S. It focuses on keeping the land environmentally safe and financially viable.
Microsoft’s Path to Carbon Negative
Microsoft’s deal with Anew is not just large—it’s also part of a broader strategy. In 2020, the company set a bold goal: to be carbon negative by 2030. That means it wants to remove more carbon from the air than it emits each year. Even more, by 2050, Microsoft plans to eliminate all the carbon it has ever released. This includes carbon from its direct operations and electricity use since its start in 1975.

To meet these goals, Microsoft has invested in a wide mix of carbon removal methods. These include:
- direct air capture, which removes carbon from the air,
- biochar,
- ocean-based carbon removal, and
- nature-based solutions like IFM.
It evaluates all projects using strict standards to ensure they are high-quality and trustworthy.
With this forest carbon deal, Microsoft continues to show that nature has a key role to play. Forests are one of the most powerful tools to fight climate change, and managing them well can create jobs, protect biodiversity, and support local communities. Plus, they remove carbon from the atmosphere.
Green is Gold: Investors Eye Forest Carbon Boom
As more companies aim to hit net zero, nature-based carbon credits are becoming more popular. These credits are different from “avoided emissions” (which prevent emissions from happening) because they actually remove carbon that’s already in the air. That’s a crucial difference for meeting long-term climate goals.
Improved forest management projects are especially attractive because they’re well-understood, scalable, and provide co-benefits beyond carbon. These include cleaner air and water, healthier habitats, and stronger local economies.
This kind of deal also sends a signal to other companies that carbon removal is essential in climate goals. While many firms focus on reducing emissions, the science shows that removal is also necessary to reach net zero and keep global warming below 1.5°C.
The volume of credits—4.8 million tons—is also meaningful. That’s roughly equal to removing the annual emissions of more than 1 million cars. It shows that corporate buyers are now looking for large-scale, trusted removal options, not just small pilot projects.
Microsoft has been the top buyer of carbon removal in 2024, alongside other tech giants like Google.

Corporate Demand for Nature-Based Solutions: Why Big Business Is Going Green
Microsoft is not the only company making big moves in the carbon credit space. Amazon, JPMorgan Chase, and Salesforce have also invested in nature-based climate solutions. In fact, demand for high-integrity carbon credits is growing so fast that supply struggles to keep up.
In an analysis by McKinsey & Company, demand for carbon credits could rise 15-fold by 2030 and 100-fold by 2050. To meet that demand, both engineered and nature-based removal options will need to grow rapidly.
Improved forest management, afforestation (planting new forests), and conservation are likely to remain key parts of the solution. McKinsey & Company projects that nature-based solutions could make up to 85% of the market in 2030.

However, investors and buyers want more transparency, monitoring, and proof that the credits deliver real, long-term impact. That’s why deals like this one matter. Microsoft, Anew Climate, and Aurora are showing what it looks like to build scale and credibility at the same time.
Setting the Bar on Nature-Based Carbon Removal
Microsoft’s landmark deal with Anew Climate and Aurora Sustainable Lands sets a new bar for forest-based carbon removal. It combines scale, duration, and integrity—offering a model for how big companies can support natural climate solutions while hitting their own targets.
As the voluntary carbon market grows, long-term, high-quality deals like this could help build trust and unlock billions in climate finance. Forests alone can’t solve the climate crisis, but with the right support, they can be a powerful part of the solution.
The post Microsoft Inks a 4.8M Tons of Forest Carbon Credit Deal with Anew Climate appeared first on Carbon Credits.
Carbon Footprint
What Nature Based Solutions Actually Mean for Corporate Climate Strategy
Carbon Footprint
What is a life cycle assessment, and why does it matter?
Most businesses have a clear picture of what happens inside their own operations. They track energy consumption, manage waste, and monitor the emissions produced on-site. What they often cannot see is everything that happens before a product reaches their facility, and everything that happens after it leaves.
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Carbon Footprint
Texas-Based EnergyX’s Project Lonestar™ Signals a Turning Point for U.S. Lithium Supply
Energy Exploration Technologies, Inc. (EnergyX), led by CEO Teague Egan, has moved the United States closer to building a reliable domestic lithium supply chain. The company recently commissioned its Project Lonestar™ lithium demonstration facility in Texas, marking a key milestone in scaling direct lithium extraction (DLE) technologies.
This development comes at a time when lithium demand is rising sharply due to electric vehicles and energy storage systems. At the same time, the U.S. remains heavily dependent on foreign processing, particularly from China.
- According to the US import data and Lithium import data of the USA, the total value of US lithium imports reached $432.36 million in 2024, a 9% decline from the previous year.
- The total value of US lithium imports (cells & batteries) accounted for $205.29 million in the first 6 months of 2025.

Against this backdrop, EnergyX’s progress offers both technological validation and strategic value.
From Concept to Reality: How Project Lonestar™ Works
Project Lonestar™ is EnergyX’s first major lithium project in the United States and its second globally. The demonstration plant, located in the Smackover region spanning Texas and Arkansas, is now operational and uses industrial-grade systems rather than small pilot equipment.
- The facility produces around 250 metric tons per year of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE).
While this output is modest compared to global supply, its importance lies in proving that EnergyX’s proprietary GET-Lit™ technology can efficiently extract lithium from brine. The plant processes locally sourced Smackover brine, a resource that has historically been underutilized despite its lithium potential.

Unlike traditional lithium production, which often relies on hard-rock mining or evaporation ponds, DLE technology directly extracts lithium from brine using advanced filtration and chemical processes. This reduces production time and may lower environmental impact.
- More importantly, the Lonestar™ plant can supply 5 to 25 tons of battery-grade lithium samples to customers.
This allows battery manufacturers to test and validate the material before committing to large-scale supply agreements.

Scaling Up: From Demonstration to Commercial Production
The demonstration plant is only the first phase of a much larger plan. EnergyX aims to scale Project Lonestar™ into a full commercial operation capable of producing 50,000 tonnes of LCE annually across two phases.
- The first phase alone targets 12,500 tonnes per year, which would already place it among the more significant lithium producers in the U.S.
- Significantly, the company has invested approximately $30 million in the demonstration facility, supported in part by a $5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.
- For the full-scale project, EnergyX estimates total capital expenditure at around $1.05 billion.
Cost metrics suggest strong economic potential. The company estimates capital costs at roughly $21,000 per tonne of capacity and operating costs near $3,750 per tonne. If these figures hold at scale, the project could compete effectively with global lithium producers, particularly in a market where cost efficiency is becoming increasingly important.
Teague Egan, Founder & CEO of EnergyX, said,
“Bringing the biggest integrated DLE lithium demonstration plant online in the United States is a foundational milestone for EnergyX and for U.S. domestic lithium production in general. This facility not only validates the performance of our technology on an industrial scale under real-world conditions, but also establishes EnergyX as the lowest cost producer in the U.S. Ultimately this benefits all our customers who need large volumes of lithium for EV and ESS applications, as well as any lithium resource owners looking to implement best-in-class DLE technology whom we are happy to license to.”
Breaking the Bottleneck: Why U.S. Refining Matters
One of the biggest challenges facing the U.S. lithium sector is not resource availability but refining capacity. While lithium deposits exist across the country, most battery-grade lithium chemicals are processed overseas.
China dominates this segment, controlling roughly 70 to 75 percent of global lithium chemical conversion capacity. This concentration creates a structural dependency. Even when lithium is mined in the U.S. or allied countries, it is often shipped abroad for processing before returning as battery materials.
Project Lonestar™ directly addresses this gap. By integrating extraction and refining into a single domestic operation, EnergyX is working to build a complete “brine-to-battery” value chain within the United States. This approach could reduce reliance on foreign processing and improve supply chain resilience.
U.S. Senator Ted Cruz highlighted the project’s importance, noting that domestic lithium production supports both energy security and defense readiness, particularly for applications in advanced battery systems.
- CHECK: LIVE LITHIUM PRICES
The Current Landscape: Limited Supply, Big Ambitions
Investment is flowing into regions such as Nevada, North Carolina, and Arkansas. If even a portion of these reserves is converted into production, the U.S. could significantly reduce its reliance on imported lithium.
Active Resources and Future Potential
At present, U.S. lithium production remains relatively small. The only active large-scale operation is the Silver Peak Mine in Nevada, which produces between 5,000 and 10,000 tonnes of LCE annually, depending on market conditions.
However, several projects are in development that could significantly expand capacity. The Thacker Pass project, for example, is expected to produce around 40,000 tonnes per year in its first phase once operational later in the decade.
In addition, brine-based developments in the Smackover region aim to produce tens of thousands of tonnes annually, with long-term plans exceeding 100,000 tonnes across multiple sites.
These projects indicate a shift from a niche domestic industry to a more substantial production base. Still, timelines remain uncertain due to regulatory and financial challenges.

Demand Surge: Batteries Drive the Lithium Boom
The urgency to expand lithium production is driven by rapid growth in battery demand. Electric vehicles, renewable energy storage, and grid modernization are all increasing lithium consumption.
According to S&P Global, U.S. lithium demand is expected to grow at an average rate of 40 percent annually between 2024 and 2029. Canada is projected to see even faster growth, albeit from a smaller base, with demand rising by around 74 percent per year over the same period.
Globally, battery capacity is forecast to approach 4 terawatt-hours by 2030. This expansion highlights lithium’s central role in the clean energy transition. Without sufficient supply, battery production—and by extension, EV adoption—could face constraints.

Why Progress Takes Time
Turning lithium reserves into operational mines and processing facilities is not straightforward. Projects often face long permitting timelines, environmental scrutiny, and legal challenges. Financing can also be difficult, especially in a volatile commodity market.
Local opposition can further complicate development, particularly in areas with high environmental concerns. These factors can delay projects by several years, slowing the pace of expansion.
To address these barriers, the U.S. government is increasing its involvement through funding, policy support, and efforts to streamline permitting. The Department of Energy’s backing of EnergyX reflects a broader strategy to accelerate domestic critical mineral development.
Conclusion: A Strategic Shift in Motion
Project Lonestar™ represents a meaningful step toward reshaping the U.S. lithium landscape. By proving the viability of direct lithium extraction at an industrial scale, EnergyX has laid the groundwork for larger, commercially viable operations.
The project also aligns with national priorities around energy security, supply chain resilience, and clean energy transition. While challenges remain, the combination of technological innovation, government support, and rising demand creates a strong foundation for growth.
As the world moves toward electrification, lithium will remain at the center of the transition. Projects like Lonestar™ show that the United States is beginning to close the gap between resource potential and real-world production—one facility at a time.
The post Texas-Based EnergyX’s Project Lonestar™ Signals a Turning Point for U.S. Lithium Supply appeared first on Carbon Credits.
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