Anthropic is the first AI startup to join the Frontier carbon removal coalition. It’s a convenient climate play, but it doesn’t fix AI’s energy gluttony.
Anthropic has officially joined the Frontier carbon removal coalition, becoming the first AI startup to sign on to the group’s $1.8 billion pledge to pull CO2 out of the atmosphere. It’s a big, bold headline meant to signal climate responsibility, but let’s not mistake a checkbook entry for a sustainability strategy.
Frontier is essentially an “advance market commitment”- it’s a group of wealthy tech giants like Google and Stripe agreeing to buy carbon removal credits before the tech is even fully scaled. It’s a noble, necessary effort to jumpstart an industry that needs massive capital. But for Anthropic, a company whose entire business model relies on energy-intensive, massive-scale model training, joining this coalition feels like applying a band-aid to a bullet wound.
The irony is thick. AI companies are currently on an unprecedented energy-buying spree, sucking up power at a rate that is actively straining power grids and keeping old-school, carbon-heavy energy plants alive. Joining a carbon removal group is a low-friction way to buy moral equity without actually having to slow down their own consumption or fundamentally change their, well, all-of-the-above energy habits.
It’s an intentional, tactical move. By committing to carbon removal, Anthropic gets the PR glow of a climate champion without ever having to disclose its real-time carbon footprint or pause the training of its energy-hungry models.
If AI companies truly cared about their environmental impact, they’d be transparent about the massive emissions they generate today. Instead, they’re choosing to fund the cleanup of tomorrow. It’s a clever distraction, but until they reconcile their insatiable appetite for electricity with their climate pledges, these coalitions look more like marketing than a genuine path to a sustainable future.


