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Deep Sky and Lufthansa Group Strike Direct Air Capture Carbon Removal Agreement

By MGN EditorialMay 21, 2026 at 06:00 PM

Canadian carbon removal company Deep Sky has entered an offtake agreement to supply the Lufthansa Group with high-quality direct air capture credits, with Senken providing due diligence and project vetting support.

## Deep Sky and Lufthansa Group Strike Direct Air Capture Carbon Removal Agreement Canadian carbon removal developer Deep Sky has signed an offtake agreement with the Lufthansa Group to supply direct air capture (DAC) carbon removal credits, according to a PR Newswire release dated May 21, 2026. The transaction, supported by carbon market specialist Senken for due diligence and project vetting, centres on quality, credibility, and long-term delivery — criteria that are increasingly scrutinised as corporate buyers face mounting pressure to demonstrate the integrity of their decarbonisation commitments. While the agreement is rooted in the aviation sector, it carries broader relevance for the maritime industry, which is navigating its own accelerating transition toward credible carbon reduction pathways. Shipping companies, port operators, and energy majors with marine operations are watching the voluntary carbon market closely as the International Maritime Organization's (IMO) revised greenhouse gas strategy sets increasingly ambitious targets for the sector. Direct air capture technology, which mechanically extracts CO2 directly from the atmosphere, is considered among the most verifiable forms of carbon removal, offering a level of permanence and measurability that nature-based offsets have often struggled to match. For industries where full decarbonisation remains technically or commercially challenging in the near term, high-quality DAC credits represent a potential bridging mechanism. Deep Sky, headquartered in Montreal, is developing large-scale DAC infrastructure in Canada, positioning the country as a hub for permanent carbon removal. The involvement of Senken — a platform focused on carbon credit quality assurance — signals a growing emphasis on third-party validation in offtake transactions, a trend likely to influence how maritime operators structure their own carbon credit procurement strategies. As the shipping industry moves toward compliance with the IMO's Carbon Intensity Indicator (CII) regulations and anticipates further mandatory measures, the frameworks being established in aviation for carbon removal procurement may offer a useful template. Industry observers note that cross-sector learnings on carbon market integrity will be critical as maritime stakeholders seek credible, auditable routes to net-zero. *Source: PR Newswire*
#carbon removal#direct air capture#decarbonisation#voluntary carbon market#IMO GHG strategy#carbon credits#net zero shipping

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