“…In line with earlier studies, Sovacool et al emphasize the importance of using DACCS to lower the stock of atmospheric emissions, not as a substitute for reducing emissions and climate adaptation (see also Beuttler et al, 2019;McLaren et al, 2019;Erans et al, 2022), as well as the need to prioritize long term storage and to leverage emerging carbon capture and storage infrastructure. The social dimensions of DACCS have received increasing attention from both instrumental (acceptability) and non-instrumental (justice and legitimacy) perspectives, with recommendations directed toward procedural conditions, such as transparency and stakeholder participation, and substantive outcomes, such as the distribution of benefits and impacts of DACCS (Buck, 2016;Pozo et al, 2020;Sovacool et al, 2022;Satterfield et al, 2023). Overall, the literature underlines the importance of introducing policy instruments to create incentives for investing and scaling up DACCS, such as carbon pricing; decarbonization policy; CDR-specific targets and tax credits; research and development subsidies for NETs and carbon utilization; carbon offset and trading protocols; and clear regulations around carbon storage and transport (Creutzig et al, 2019;Fajardy et al, 2019;McLaren et al, 2019;Honegger et al, 2021;Meckling and Biber, 2021).…”