Deloitte & CarbonCure: A Concrete Commitment to Sustainability
In this case study, the sustainability team at Deloitte shares why the global leader in professional services selected CarbonCure's innovative carbon utilization technologies to help achieve its sustainability goals.
View Case StudyShopify & CarbonCure: A Climate Success Story
The sustainability team at Shopify shares what the leading global commerce company looks for when investing in carbon removal credits and why it continues to buy CarbonCure carbon credits.
View Case StudyHow Carbon Credits Are Transforming Concrete Plants into Carbon Removal Factories
Discover how carbon credit revenue has turbocharged the financial case for Lauren Concrete to remove and reduce as much CO2 as possible—creating a win-win for the concrete producer and the environment.
View Case StudyHow Carbon Credits Are Helping to Decarbonize the Concrete Industry
Access the case study to discover how carbon credits are allowing Butler Concrete to offer cleaner, greener concrete products to their customers.
View Case StudyInvert & CarbonCure: A Climate Success Story
Invert Co-CEO Andre Fernandez shares what prompted a milestone investment into CarbonCure Carbon Credits and what others can learn from it.
View Case Study“Storing carbon dioxide in concrete is essentially irreversible. With CarbonCure's credits, you can have confidence that your credits are helping to reverse climate change over the long term.”
“As soon as you do real, technical due diligence, it’s clear to see that CarbonCure is a leader when it comes to durable, highly credible offsets.”
“CarbonCure is an exciting new addition to our offset investments portfolio, which we diversify between traditional forest-based offsets and emerging technologies with high impact potential.”
“CarbonCure’s solution is compelling because it's permanent, relatively low cost, and could scale to the size of the global concrete market, sequestering more than 0.5 gigatons of CO₂ annually.”
“CarbonCure’s technology enables the decarbonization of the concrete industry at scale. This is vital to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius.”