Microsoft’s agreement to purchase more than 100,000 tonnes of carbon removal credits from Indian startup Varaha highlights the growing tension between rapid AI expansion and corporate climate commitments. As cloud computing and artificial intelligence scale globally, large technology firms are increasingly turning to durable carbon removal to offset emissions that are rising faster than efficiency gains. The deal centers on converting cotton crop residue – often burned after harvest – into biochar, a charcoal-like material that can store carbon in soil for extended periods while reducing air pollution from open-field burning. At NewsTrackerToday, we see this as a strategic attempt to combine emissions removal with local environmental benefits, particularly in regions where agricultural waste management remains a persistent challenge.
The project will initially focus on India’s Maharashtra state and involve roughly 40,000 to 45,000 smallholder farmers. Varaha plans to build 18 industrial-scale reactors operating over 15 years, with total projected carbon removal exceeding 2 million tonnes over the project’s lifetime. NewsTrackerToday notes that while the long-term projections are significant, execution risk remains high due to the distributed nature of biomass collection and verification. According to Ethan Cole, macroeconomics and central banks analyst, Microsoft’s growing reliance on carbon removal reflects a broader structural issue. Emissions linked to AI infrastructure sit largely in Scope 3 categories, where reductions are slow and capital-intensive. As a result, carbon removal is increasingly used as a balancing mechanism rather than a substitute for near-term decarbonisation.
Operational credibility is central to the partnership. Microsoft’s requirements for digital monitoring, reporting, and verification forced Varaha to develop proprietary tracking systems capable of operating across tens of thousands of farms. NewsTrackerToday views this as one of the deal’s most consequential elements. On the carbon removal market, delivery confidence and auditability are becoming more valuable than headline volumes.
The agreement comes as Microsoft pursues its target of becoming carbon negative by 2030, despite reporting a substantial increase in total greenhouse gas emissions compared with its 2020 baseline. Much of that growth is tied to data center construction, hardware supply chains, and energy consumption driven by AI workloads. In this context, NewsTrackerToday interprets the Varaha deal as part of a broader portfolio approach rather than a standalone solution.
From a strategic standpoint, Isabella Moretti, corporate strategy and M&A analyst, argues that Microsoft is deliberately diversifying across carbon removal technologies and geographies. Biochar offers modular deployment and faster scalability than some alternatives, even if volumes remain small relative to the company’s overall footprint. This diversification reduces dependency on any single removal pathway.
The scale mismatch remains evident. Microsoft’s annual emissions run into the tens of millions of tonnes, while this agreement covers a fraction of that total. However, durable carbon removal markets are still capacity-constrained. Early buyers are effectively securing future supply as the sector industrialises. Beyond carbon accounting, the project aims to curb open burning of cotton stalks and improve soil health through biochar application, potentially reducing fertilizer dependence over time. These co-benefits may strengthen political and social support for such initiatives in emerging markets.
For News Tracker Today, the broader signal is clear. As AI-driven growth continues to outpace emissions reductions, carbon removal is becoming a core strategic pillar rather than a peripheral offset. The success of Microsoft’s approach will depend less on announced volumes and more on whether projects like Varaha can deliver verifiable, durable removals at scale without eroding trust in the market.