Global atmospheric CO₂ has peaked at 426 ppm and is now falling 3.1 ppm per year.
Not because of treaties.
Because electricity is so cheap that removing CO₂ has become the world’s largest and most profitable industry.
Here is the exact moment the climate war ended and nobody noticed.
The economics that flipped the sign
| Year | All-in cost of DAC (direct air capture) per ton CO₂ | Revenue per ton (carbon credits + tax incentives) | Profit per ton | Energy required per ton |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | $620 | $90 | −$530 | 2,200 kWh |
| 2030 | $94 | $120 | +$26 | 1,800 kWh |
| 2033 | $31 | $180 | +$149 | 1,400 kWh |
| 2035 | $9 | $220 | +$211 | 1,100 kWh |
| 2037 | −$11 (you are paid to remove it) | $240 | +$251 | 900 kWh |
At −$11/ton the game stops being “climate policy” and becomes “arbitrage against the sky.”
The machine that prints money
The winning design is no longer Climeworks’ pretty Swiss boxes.
It is the 2029 “Desert Whale” built by a CATL–Occidental joint venture in the Empty Quarter:
- Size: 1.2 km long × 180 m wide × 14 m tall
- Footprint: one abandoned oil field
- Capture rate: 1.8 million tons CO₂ per year per unit
- Energy source: on-site Sunbelt electricity at −$0.007/kWh
- Byproducts: pure O₂ sold to steel mills, pure N₂ to fertilizer plants, waste heat used to desalinate water
- All-in profit 2037: $450 million per Whale per year
- Construction cost: $380 million, paid back in 10 months
There are already 1,840 Whales operating or under construction as of December 2037.
They remove 3.3 billion tons per year and generate $830 billion in pure cash flow.
The carbon removal map – December 2037
| Location | Number of Whales | Annual removal (Gt) | Operator notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Saudi Empty Quarter | 920 | 1.66 | CATL–Oxy–PIF |
| Western Australia desert | 380 | 0.68 | BYD–Fortescue |
| Atacama (Chile) | 210 | 0.38 | Chinese–Chilean JV |
| Texas Permian (ironic) | 180 0.32 | Occidental solo | |
| Sahara (Morocco/Algeria) | 150 0.27 | TotalEnergies–Masdar |
Total running: 1,840 → 3.31 Gt/year
Under construction: 2,600 more → another 4.7 Gt/year by 2041
The day we hit 1 trillion tons removed
August 14, 2044, 9:42 a.m. UTC.
The 4,112th Whale in the Rub’ al-Khali finishes its 1,000,000,000,000th ton.
The control room erupts in polite applause.
A drone camera pans across endless rows of silent machines drinking the sky.
Atmospheric CO₂ reads 348 ppm and falling 8.4 ppm/year.
What negative emissions actually feel like on the ground
- Global temperature peaks at +1.68 °C in 2041 and is now declining 1.39 °C and cooling
- Crop yields in the Sahel are 240 % of 2020 levels because of deliberate CO₂ fertilization greenhouses running on waste heat
- Coral reefs that were declared extinct in 2033 are reseeded and growing faster than 1990 rates
- The Amazon is being rewilded from the air by drone fleets dropping 12 billion seed bombs per year, paid for by carbon profits
- Bangladesh no longer needs dikes; the sea level rise stopped in 2040 and is now falling 4 mm/year
The strange new economy born from waste
By 2046 the carbon-removal industry is larger than the entire 2025 oil industry.
Top ten companies by revenue are all DAC operators.
Their balance sheets are surreal:
- $1.9 trillion annual profit on $420 billion capex
- Margins: 450 %
- Dividend yield: 41 %
- P/E ratio: doesn’t matter, they pay dividends in physical CO₂ stored underground
Investors joke that the ticker symbol for Occidental’s DAC subsidiary should be “ATM.”
The cultural shift nobody predicted
Once removal outpaces emissions 10:1, climate activism dies overnight.
The last Extinction Rebellion protest in London (2039) has 41 attendees and is mostly nostalgia tourists.
The new youth cause is “re-wilding boredom” — campaigns to deliberately leave some deserts un-Whaled so there is still empty space on Earth.
The final irony
In 2051 the last Whale is shut down.
Not because we ran out of money.
Because we ran out of CO₂ to remove.
Atmospheric concentration stabilizes at 280 ppm — pre-industrial levels — and the machines are simply turned off.
Some are left standing as monuments.
Most are dismantled and the metal recycled into children’s playground equipment.
The species that once feared it would cook the planet instead accidentally turned the sky into a battery and then fixed the sky for fun.
Next post (the last one): “The Long Dawn – What Humanity Does With Infinite Energy, Infinite Food, and a Perfect Climate, and Why Most of It Will Be Beautiful and Terrifying at the Same Time.”
We didn’t save the world.
We just got so rich we accidentally fixed it and then forgot why we were ever scared.