Trees pull CO₂ from the air. Healthy soil locks it away for good.

We’re growing both — across North Texas.

At Carbon Capture Farms we’re fighting climate change the way this landscape was built to fight it: with deep-rooted trees, native prairie grasses, and the rich Blackland soils underneath them. We grow climate-adapted trees for businesses and neighborhoods across Texas, and we’re restoring working land into a living carbon sink — one acre at a time.
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What is carbon farming?

Plants pull carbon dioxide out of the air and store it — in their leaves, trunks, and roots, and in the soil they live in. When trees and grasses grow, they convert that carbon into wood, root mass, and stable soil organic matter. Carbon farming is the practice of working land so that more carbon goes in than comes out: planting deep-rooted species, keeping the ground covered, and managing grazing that builds soil instead of breaking it down.

How is the carbon captured?

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Plant trees. Breath easier. Save the planet.

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Carbon is water.

In Texas, you can’t capture carbon without water — and you can’t hold onto water without carbon. Every 1% increase in soil organic matter lets an acre of land hold an additional 20,000+ gallons of water. The same soil chemistry that fights drought slows floods, and feeds whatever grows on top of it. Build the carbon, and the rest follows.