Inside Microsoft’s mission to go carbon negative


In January, Microsoft pledged to be carbon negative (removing more carbon from the atmosphere than it emits) by 2030. — Efes Kitap/Pixabay

Over the past four years, Lucas Joppa, Microsoft Corp’s 37-year-old chief environmental officer, has dislocated and broken one shoulder, separated the other one, broken his right wrist, and also broken his left thumb. In early May he was pretty sure his right thumb was broken, but his hand surgeon said it was a torn ligament. It’s not that he’s clumsy or reckless – he calculates that, given the amount of time he spends on a bike or skis, his "error rate” is about 0.08% – it’s just that he has a tendency not to look before he jumps.

It’s this tolerance for risk-and falling-that makes him well-suited for the unprecedented task that lies ahead. In January, Microsoft pledged to be carbon negative (removing more carbon from the atmosphere than it emits) by 2030 and to spend US$1bil (RM4.3bil) on a climate investment fund, much of it aimed at bolstering carbon-removal tech, a nascent field with lots of big ideas but only a handful of companies that are trying it. It was a statement of intent more than a concrete plan. Right now none of this is possible. Joppa and his colleagues are all too aware they can’t wait to act until everything is certain. The fund plans to announce its first investment later this year.

Save 30% OFF The Star Digital Access

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

RM 9.73/month

Billed as RM 9.73 for the 1st month, RM 13.90 thereafter.

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 8.63/month

Billed as RM 103.60 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

OpenAI sued for allegedly enabling murder-suicide
J.P. Morgan harnesses blockchain for debt issuance amid digital asset adoption boost
Amazon plans new one-hour pickup service in stores, Business Insider reports
NAACP pressing for ‘equity-first’ AI standards in medicine
Microsoft fights $2.8 billion UK lawsuit over cloud computing licences
Disney to invest $1 billion in OpenAI, license characters for Sora video tool
Exclusive-AI software startup Harness valued at $5.5 billion in latest financing round
'Clair Obscur': French hit with chance to sweep Game Awards
US phone imports from Samsung hub Vietnam hit lowest level since 2020
Oracle slumps as gloomy forecasts, soaring spending fan AI bubble worries

Others Also Read