Autoblog and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article.Mazda's Carbon-Capturing Vision Moves Closer to RealityMazda turned heads at last year's Japan Mobility Show with the Vision X-Coupe – a futuristic take on the brand's Kodo design language that had everyone guessing it was the next Mazda3 in disguise. But under the sharp sheet metal and rotary-powered electric guts, Mazda dropped something even bolder: Mobile Carbon Capture.For the uninitiated, Mazda's Mobile Carbon Capture sucks carbon dioxide (CO2) straight out of the exhaust while you drive. At the time, it sounded like one of those auto-show pipe dreams, but now, Mazda claims it's actually getting closer to making that wild vision real.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Japanese automaker just wrapped up a second round of real-world testing during the Super Taikyu endurance racing series. This time, not only did it capture more CO2, but it also managed to stash it on board while the car was still tearing up the track – a big step if this tech is ever going to make sense outside a lab.MazdaView the 2 images of this gallery on the original articleA Big Improvement Over Last Year's TestMazda's first crack at this was back in November 2025, using the Mazda Spirit Racing 3 Future Concept – a race car running on hydrotreated vegetable oil, a carbon-neutral fuel already making the rounds in Europe. During that initial demonstration, the system captured 84 grams of carbon dioxide. While modest, it proved that the concept could work in a real racing environment.For the latest round in the 2026 Super Taikyu Series (the same event where Akio Toyoda revealed a 7-cylinder Toyota Camry), Mazda leveled up the system with a CO2 desorption trick and an onboard tank. Now, the car could grab, squeeze, and stash the carbon dioxide while still in the heat of battle.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe result was a substantial improvement. Over the course of the 24-hour endurance event, the system captured 804 grams of CO2 – around 9.6 times more than the amount recovered during the first test. According to Mazda, this marks the first successful demonstration of the complete capture, release, compression, and storage process operating as an integrated system.Mazda also claims that, in certain conditions, the combo of carbon-neutral fuel and captured emissions actually beats the carbon-cutting numbers of your average production car. In other words, going carbon-negative might not be just a fantasy.MazdaHow Mazda Mobile Carbon Capture WorksThe secret sauce here is zeolite – a porous mineral that basically acts like a CO2 sponge. As exhaust flows through, the zeolite grabs onto CO2. When it's full, waste heat from the engine bakes the zeolite, kicking the carbon dioxide loose so it can be collected. An electric compressor then squeezes the gas and shoves it into a storage tank in the car.Mazda's big-picture plan is simple: run cars on carbon-neutral fuel and catch the CO2 as you go. The more you drive, the better it gets for the atmosphere – or so the theory goes. Mazda wants to make this a reality by 2035.Still a Long Road AheadCarbon capture is usually something you hear about at factories or power plants, not in your daily driver. That's what makes Mazda's move so weird – and kind of cool. Of course, there's a massive gap between a race car demo and something you can actually buy, especially with big questions about cost, packaging, and where all that CO2 is supposed to go.AdvertisementAdvertisementHowever, moving from simply capturing CO2 to actually storing it onboard during real-world driving is a notable step forward. Whether it eventually reaches road cars or not, Mazda deserves some credit for exploring an alternative path to reducing emissions rather than focusing solely on electrification.Jacob Oliva/AutoblogView the 5 images of this gallery on the original articleThis story was originally published by Autoblog on Jun 9, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Autoblog as a Preferred Source by clicking here.