Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer
Project

SeaO2-CDR


Start of Project: 01.06.2023 — End of Project: 31.05.2027


Strategies for the Evaluation and Assessment of Ocean based Carbon Dioxide Removal (SEAO2-CDR) is an EU funded project that unites scientific, economic, legal, political, social and ethical researchers to develop the mechanisms, tools and guidelines required to ensure that ocean-based carbon dioxide removal techniques can be evaluated and implemented in a responsible and transparent manner.

The use of ocean-based CDR techniques in support of these polices is gaining significant interest, as the enhancement of natural biological and abiotic processes, and application of engineered marine solutions, may offer the potential to remove gigatons of CO2 from the atmosphere every year. However, there are a number of challenges that need to be overcome before emerging ocean-based CDR approaches can be applied at the scale required to combat the effects of climate change.

SEAO2-CDR aims to establish and evaluate the mechanisms and processes required to ensure the environmentally safe, socially acceptable and economically viable implementation of appropriate ocean-based CDR approaches in support of global climate policies. It will achieve this by developing the tools and frameworks that facilitate the evaluation and application of archetypal biological, chemical and physical ocean-based CDR techniques. Common assessment processes, governance structures and technologies will be used to explore system-level interactions between different approaches in order to deliver the insights, tools and guidelines required for the safe and effective implementation of ocean-based CDR. These advances will enable SEAO2-CDR to help establish the extent to which such approaches can support climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies and the transition to a climate-neutral and resilience society.

Learn more about the project

Contact

Funding

SEAO2-CDR has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 101081362.

  • 10 Oct

    2025

    Climate induced Congestion in Ports: General Equilibrium Consequences on Transportation and Trade — Jeanne Astier

    Public

  • 05 Sep

    2025

    Trade and Tariff Evasion in Oligopoly — Onur Koska

    Public

  • 17 Jul

    2025

    Distribution of Climate Damages in Convergence-Consistent Growth Projections – Anthony Harding

    Kiel Institut für Weltwirtschaft

    Public

  • 04 Jul

    2025

    Suppliers Searching, Concentration and Misallocation — Chek Yin Choi

    Public

Kiel Institute Experts

Research

  • Research Area: Global Commons and Climate Policy

    Global Commons and Climate Policy