Anthropic has joined Frontier, the advance-purchase coalition that funds carbon removal technology, as the group committed an additional $915 million to the sector, bringing its total pledges to $1.8 trillion. Announced on June 17, 2026, the move adds the AI developer to a roster of participating buyers that includes Stripe, Google, Shopify, Salesforce and H&M Group, and marks one of the larger single commitments to a carbon removal market that has struggled to ensure durability demand.
Frontier operates as an advance market commitment, a model in which buyers contract to purchase carbon removal credits years ahead of delivery, giving early stage developers the revenue certainty they need to raise finance, hire and scale. Launched in 2022 by companies including Stripe and Google, the coalition has now brokered purchasing and finance agreements with more than 50 startups. The latest $915 million will target a spread of approaches — ocean alkalinity enhancement, biomass-based removal, enhanced rock weathering and direct air capture — reflecting a deliberate strategy of backing a portfolio of technologies rather than betting on a single pathway to large-scale removal.
Anthropic’s entry is the headline addition, and it lands at a consequential moment for the industry. The carbon removal market has endured a difficult stretch, and the demand picture became more uncertain after Microsoft, the largest historic buyer of carbon removal, paused its purchasing — a development that removed a major source of forward demand. Frontier re-upping at this point, and drawing in a high-profile new participant, helps offset that gap and lends the field renewed momentum. Hannah Bebbington Valori, who leads Frontier, framed the expanded finance and Anthropic’s arrival as evidence of continued conviction that carbon removal belongs in any serious climate strategy.
The decision illustrates how AI companies are being drawn into climate commitments as the energy and emissions footprint of their computer-intensive businesses comes under closer examination. Training and running large models consumes substantial power, and the data center buildout behind the AI boom has put the sector’s environment impact firmly on the agenda for boards, regulators and customers. Anthropic joining a credible advance-purchase coalition rather than relying solely on conventional offsets points to a more rigorous approach, aligning the company with buyers who have committed to durable, measurable removal rather than lower quality credits.
The development carries a wider lesson for executive teams weigh how to handle corporate climate spending. Advance market commitments concentrate purchasing power to build supply that would not otherwise exist, an approach first proven in accelerating vaccine development, and they offer a more more defensive route than spot purchases of cheap offsets that have drawn criticism for questionable impact. Companies under pressure to demonstrate genuine environmental action — particularly those, like AI developers, whose growth raises their emissions profile — will look at the Frontier model as a way to convert climate spending into verifiable outcomes rather than reputational risk.
Whether $915 million is enough to sustain the sector through a demand-constrained period will depend on whether other large buyers follow Anthropic in committing, or whether Microsoft’s pause proves the start of a broader retreat. The world is expected to need to remove billions of tons of carbon a year by mid-century to meet climate goals, a scale that dwarfs current capacity and requires sustained corporate and government demand to reach. Business leaders watching the carbon removal market should treat Frontier’s expansion and Anthropic’s entry as a test of whether voluntary corporate demand can carry the industry towards commercial viability, or whether it remains dependent on a small group of committed buyers willing to fund a market the wider corporate world has yet to embrace at scale.










