Spiritus Launches A Pilot DAC Plant In New Mexico With Support From Nambé Pueblo
Spiritus Launches A Pilot DAC Plant In New Mexico With Support From Nambé Pueblo
Climate tech company Spiritus is launching a pilot plant in New Mexico to demonstrate and test its cost-effective, scalable direct air capture (DAC) technology.
The pilot facility will be established on tribal land in Nambé Pueblo, with support from the Nambé Pueblo Development Corporation (NPDC).
Scheduled to come online in the second half of 2025, the pilot facility is projected to be able to deliver 1,000 tons of gross carbon removal once it reaches peak operating capacity.
Spiritus has developed a cutting-edge DAC technology that leverages a unique solution with rapid sorption and desorption rates at a fraction of the sorbent cost compared to advanced sorbents under passive DAC conditions.
By venturing into demonstrating this technology at the pilot plant, the company will bring many high-skill employment opportunities for the local residents. Additionally, this initiative is expected to bring an economic influx to the area through the contracting of vendors and the commissioning of tradesmen.
Spiritus will complete the pilot plant with help from the Nambé Pueblo Development Corporation, which recognized a like-minded environmental steward in the face of Spiritus.
In support of the project, the NPDC provided the pilot facility, along with crucial infrastructure enhancements, navigating Spiritus in the process of building a network of trusted vendors and services to collaborate with on this project.
Relevant: Spiritus Begins Sorbent Production For Its DAC Technology In Missouri
The news of the pilot project comes after the successful October 2024 launch of the Garden One facility, a sorbent production plant located in Lee’s Summit, Missouri.
With these strategic moves, Spiritus is gearing up to advance the development of their flagship project, dubbed Orchard One, a direct air capture site with geological carbon sequestration, slated to become one of the biggest projects of this kind in the world.
Expected to be operational by 2026 in Central Wyoming, the Orchard One DAC+S Initiative will have the capacity to capture and sequester up to two megatons of CO2 from the atmosphere every year.
Read more: Spiritus Taps Markets Expert From Carbon Direct As New Executive