Occidental Petroleum Continues Working Toward Capturing This Potential $5 Trillion Future Market Opportunity

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Occidental recently lined up a potential funding partner for its next carbon capture project.

  • The oil company is an emerging leader in this potentially massive market.

  • It's also working on commercializing the technology.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Occidental Petroleum ›

Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY) believes carbon capture and storage (CCS) will eventually become a massive market. The oil company estimates it could be a $3 trillion to $5 trillion global industry in the future. It's not alone in that view. Oil giant ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) estimates that there could be a $4 trillion market for capturing and storing carbon dioxide by 2050.

Both oil companies are working toward capturing this potentially multitrillion-dollar market opportunity. Occidental recently signed a deal with a potential partner to develop what could be its next direct air capture (DAC) facility in Texas. The company's early leadership in carbon capture and storage puts it in a strong position to capture a meaningful portion of what looks like a massive opportunity.

A person looking at icons representing falling carbon dioxide emissions.
Image source: Getty Images.

Building a carbon removal powerhouse

Occidental Petroleum and its subsidiary 1PointFive signed an agreement with XRG, the investment company of Abu Dhabi's ADNOC, to evaluate a joint venture to develop a DAC facility in South Texas. As part of the deal, XRG will consider investing up to $500 million into a facility that could capture 500,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide per year.

The oil company noted that the announcement follows several significant milestones in developing DAC technology. That includes progress on constructing its first DAC facility in West Texas. The STRATOS facility is on track to begin commercial operations this year. That facility would also capture up to 500,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide per year. It's partnering with investment giant BlackRock, which agreed to invest $550 million into the project.

Occidental was also awarded up to $650 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy to help support the development of its South Texas DAC hub. The initial 500,000-tonnes-per-year DAC facility would only be the beginning of this hub. The site has the potential to support up to 30 million metric tons of carbon dioxide removal each year through DAC facilities. Meanwhile, the site has about 165 square miles of acreage that has the potential to store up to 3 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide in underground saline formations.

Commercializing a nascent industry

Occidental Petroleum has also been working to commercialize its DAC technology to make money from its investments. A major aspect of its strategy has been selling carbon removal credits to companies seeking to reduce their carbon footprints. For example, it signed an agreement with Microsoft last July to sell 500,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide removal credits over six years to support the technology giant's carbon removal strategy. That was the largest single purchase of carbon removal credits enabled by DAC technology. These credits will support Occidental's STRATOS DAC facility. The oil company has signed agreements to sell carbon credits to several other companies, including AT&T, Amazon, and TD.