George Carlin once said the planet doesn't need saving; the planet is fine. It's the people who are f****d. He was talking about a different kind of delusion, but he might as well have been watching a Climeworks investor deck. I've spent thirty years in the impact space. Thirty years of watching money that was supposed to change the world get dressed up in language that would make a marketing professor weep with joy. I've seen greenwashing dressed as strategy, incrementalism sold as transformation, and now, in what may be the purest expression of wishful thinking the financial sector has ever produced, I am watching the world's largest banks write checks to a machine in Switzerland and Iceland that is, by its own operational math, a net carbon emitter. Let me say that again. A company whose entire business model is removing carbon from the atmosphere has been, in documented periods, adding more carbon to the sky through its corporate operations than its machines are taking out. And the response from the financial establishment? More agreements. More press releases provide "the illusion of choice dressed up as progress." The Guest List at the World's Most Expensive Dinner Party Let's give credit where it's due. The agreement roster is extraordinary in its ambition and its scope. These are not small actors. JPMorgan Chase signed a nine-year, $20 million purchase agreement for 25,000 metric tons of carbon removal. Morgan Stanley committed to 40,000 tons stretching out to 2037, their first direct air capture deal, which was celebrated as a landmark. TD Bank signed a 10-year agreement announced in June 2026. UBS is locked in a 10-year removal deal. Swiss Re signed what was breathlessly promoted as the world's first long-term direct air capture purchase agreement. Boston Consulting Group went further than any of them, a 15-year strategic partnership for 80,000 metric tons, the largest corporate buyer commitment in Climeworks' history. NTT DATA Group came aboard in April 2026. And the corporate world didn't stop at finance and consulting. Stripe signed up. Microsoft. Shopify. H&M Group. SAP is committed to 33,500 tons. Schneider Electric pledged 31,000 tons. This is, on paper, an impressive coalition of institutional credibility. In practice, it is the most expensive proof of concept ever assembled for a technology that is currently operating at 0.3% of its claimed capacity. These agreements reveal everything you need to know, not about the climate, but about how elite institutions manage their reputations. What the Journalists in Iceland Found Out Here is what the press conferences did not cover. Investigative reporters at Heimildin, the Icelandic news outlet that actually bothered to audit what was happening on the ground rather than in the boardrooms, dug into Climeworks' own carbon accounting and found something remarkable in its ugliness. In 2023, Climeworks' global corporate operations, the flights to climate summits, the infrastructure, the expansion activity, and the administrative machinery of a company that had raised hundreds of millions of dollars produced approximately 1,700 metric tons of CO₂. Meanwhile, the lifetime atmospheric capture of Climeworks' Orca plant at that point sat at roughly 2,400 metric tons. Total. In its entire operational life. The company's own internal corporate footprint was rapidly approaching, and in some accounting periods, surpassing its total atmospheric removal output. Heimildin didn't editorialize. They simply did the arithmetic that the corporate communications teams had conspicuously avoided. The machines weren't keeping up with the company's own travel schedule. CleanTechnica then took the Heimildin data global. Their piece, "Climeworks' DAC & Fiscal Collapse & The Brutal Reality Of Pulling Carbon From The Sky",