Remove carbon as you grow your business

With Stripe Climate, you can direct a fraction of your revenue to help scale emerging carbon removal technologies in just a few clicks. Join a growing group of ambitious businesses changing the course of climate change.

Enrol in one minute

Contribute a fraction of your company’s revenue to fund permanent carbon removal technologies straight from your dashboard in just a few clicks.

Fund permanent carbon removal

We direct 100% of your contribution to carbon removal. Carbon removal projects are sourced and vetted by Frontier, Stripe's in-house team of science and commercial experts.

Share effortlessly

Let your customers know about your commitment with a new badge updated automatically on Stripe-hosted checkout, receipts, and invoices. Our asset kit makes it easy to use the badge anywhere you see fit.

Available now for global businesses

It will take a global, collective effort to scale carbon removal. Stripe Climate is available to Stripe users globally.

Early adopters

Join ambitious businesses

A growing group of early adopters is helping change the course of carbon removal.

The case for funding carbon removal

Carbon removal is critical to counteract climate change

To prevent the most catastrophic effects of climate change, we should aim to limit global average temperature increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, which corresponds to reducing global annual CO₂ emissions from about 40 gigatons per year as of 2018, to net zero by 2050.

To accomplish this, the world will likely need to both radically reduce the new emissions we put into the air, and remove carbon already in the atmosphere.

Path to limit global temperature increase to ~1.5°C
Limit global temperatures increase to:
Historical emissions ~2°C path ~1.5°C path Current path
Carbon removal needed to limit global temperature increase to ~1.5°C.
Historical emissions via Global Carbon Project,1 "Current path" shows SSP4-6.0,2,3 removal pathways adapted from CICERO.4 For simplicity this chart only shows CO₂, though the modelled scenarios account for other greenhouse gas emissions, all of which will need to be reduced.

However, carbon removal is behind

Existing carbon removal solutions such as reforestation and soil carbon sequestration are important, but they alone are unlikely to scale to the size of the problem. New carbon removal technologies need to be developed – ones that have the potential to be high volume and low cost by 2050 – even if they aren’t yet mature.

Today, carbon removal solutions face a chicken-and-egg problem. As early technologies, they’re more expensive, so don’t attract a critical mass of customers. But without wider adoption, they can’t scale production to become cheaper.

Early adopters can change the course of carbon removal

Early purchasers can help new carbon removal technologies get down the cost curve and up the volume curve. Experience with manufacturing learning and experience curves has shown repeatedly that deployment and scale beget improvement, a phenomenon seen across DNA sequencing, hard drive capacity, and solar panels.

This thinking shaped Stripe’s initial purchases and ultimately led us to launch Frontier, an advanced market commitment (AMC) to buy carbon removal. The goal is to send a strong demand signal to researchers, entrepreneurs, and investors that there is a growing market for these technologies. We’re optimistic that we can shift the trajectory of the industry and increase the likelihood the world has the portfolio of solutions needed to avoid the worst effects of climate change.

Stylised representation of experience curves from the Santa Fe Institute.5

How we find and fund

Our portfolio and scientific reviewers

Stripe Climate works with Frontier, Stripe's in-house team of science and commercial experts committed to carbon removal technologies, to make carbon removal purchases. Frontier is advised by a multidisciplinary group of top scientific experts to help us evaluate the most promising carbon removal technologies. Explore the growing portfolio of projects, read the criteria we use to select them, or view our open sourced project applications.

Target criteria

See what we look for when evaluating projects.

Project applications

View our open source project applications.

Our portfolio

Spring 2022 projects

AspiraDAC is building a modular, solar-powered direct air capture system with the energy supply integrated into the modules. Their metal-organic framework sorbent has low temperature heat requirements and a path to cheap material costs, and their modular approach allows them to experiment with a more distributed scale-up.

Direct air capture

Mineral weathering already naturally captures CO₂ at gigaton scale. Lithos accelerates this by spreading basalt on croplands to increase dissolved inorganic carbon in the soil. Their technology uses novel soil models and machine learning to maximise CO₂ removal while boosting crop growth. The team is scaling their empirical verification, river network, and plant-tissue studies to advance measurement of CO₂ drawdown and ecosystem impact.

Enhanced weathering

Travertine is re-engineering chemical production for carbon removal. Using electrochemistry, Travertine produces sulphuric acid to accelerate the weathering of ultramafic mine tailings, releasing reactive elements that convert carbon dioxide from the air into carbonate minerals that are stable on geologic timescales. Their process turns mining waste into a source of carbon removal as well as raw materials for other clean transition technologies such as batteries.

Enhanced weathering

RepAir uses clean electricity to capture CO₂ from the air using a novel electrochemical cell and partners with Carbfix to inject and mineralize the CO₂ underground. The demonstrated energy efficiency of RepAir’s capture step is already notable and continues to advance. This approach has the potential to deliver low-cost carbon removal that minimises added strain to the electric grid.

Direct air capture

This project, a collaboration between 8 Rivers' Calcite and Origen, accelerates the natural process of carbon mineralisation by contacting highly reactive slaked lime with ambient air to capture CO₂. The resulting carbonate minerals are calcined to create a concentrated CO₂ stream for geologic storage, and then looped continuously. The inexpensive materials and fast cycle time make this a promising approach to affordable capture at scale.

Direct air capture

Living Carbon wants to engineer algae to rapidly produce sporopollenin, a highly durable biopolymer which can then be dried, harvested and stored. Initial research aims to better understand the field's thinking on the durability of sporopollenin as well as the optimal algae strain to quickly produce it. Applying synthetic biology tools to engineer natural systems for improved and durable carbon capture has the potential to be a low-cost and scalable removal pathway.

Synthetic biology

Technical reviewers

Habib Azarabadi, PhD

Arizona State University
Direct Air capture

Holly Jean Buck, PhD

University at Buffalo
Governance

Wil Burns, PhD

Northwestern University
Governance

Anna Dubowik

Negative Emissions Platform
Governance

Petrissa Eckle, PhD

ETH Zurich
Energy Systems

Erika Foster, PhD

Point Blue Conservation Science
Ecosystem Ecology

Matteo Gazzani, PhD

Utrecht University Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development
Direct Air capture

Lauren Gifford, PhD

University of Arizona’s School of Geography, Development & Environment
Governance

Sophie Gill

University of Oxford Department of Earth Sciences
Oceans

Steve Hamburg, PhD

Environmental Defense Fund
Ecosystem Ecology

Anna-Maria Hubert, PhD

University of Calgary Faculty of Law
Governance

Lennart Joos, PhD

Out of the Blue
Oceans

Susana García López, PhD

Heriot-Watt University
Direct Air capture

Kate Maher, PhD

Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment
Geochemistry

Alexander Muroyama, PhD

Paul Scherrer Institut
Electrochemistry

Daniel Nothaft, PhD

University of Pennsylvania
Mineralisation

Teagen Quilichini, PhD

Canadian National Research Council
Biology

Zach Quinlan

Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Oceans

Vikram Rao, PhD

Research Triangle Energy Consortium
Mineralisation

Paul Reginato, PhD

Innovative Genomics Institute at UC Berkeley
Biotechnology

Debra Reinhart, PhD

University of Central Florida
Waste Management

Phil Renforth, PhD

Heriot-Watt University
Mineralisation

Sarah Saltzer, PhD

Stanford Center for Carbon Storage
Geologic Storage

Mijndert van der Spek, PhD

Heriot-Watt University
Direct Air capture

Shannon Valley, PhD

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Oceans

Fabiano Ximenes, PhD

New South Wales Department of Primary Industries
Biomass / Bioenergy

FAQs

Get answers to common questions about Stripe Climate.