Much is being made about a new technology for removing carbon dioxide from the air around us. It is said to be three times more efficient than current carbon capture and storage processes.
This new method actually does take CO2 from the air we breath rather than removing it from chimneys and flues, so that's novel. Then, using chemicals (from somewhere), it turns it into bicarbonate of soda which we can chuck safely into the sea, but there the good news stops.
None of these schemes will ever reduce the parts per million (ppm) of CO2 in the atmosphere. To do that we need to take out more CO2 per year than we put in, and we are light years away from doing anything like that. That technology will never exist.
We currently release about 37 billion tonnes so we need to produce less, a lot less. Let's say we were to aim for the 1960s figure, about the time the population began to rise exponentially, we would have to get down to 9 billion tonnes per year and while we are doing it we would need to take out billions of tonnes as well. Even at the 1960s level we would still be increasing the ppm of CO2.
What we need to do is reduce the ppm to about 350 or so and that is a pipe dream.