Green Coke company half-way home
Green Coke company half-way home in equity crowd-funding bid
November 24, 2014: CarbonScape’s equity
crowd-funding offer has raised more than half its $400,000
target capital – after only 12 days.
The Marlborough carbon products company’s offer on the Snowball Effect platform passed the $200,000 mark today.
CarbonScape holds an international patent on a revolutionary method for the production of products such as carbon-neutral Green Coke. Produced from waste wood, Green Coke can replace the climate-destroying coking coal used in the steelmaking process.
The microwave technology has been proven in the company’s Blenheim laboratory, and the new investment will be used to build a pilot plant to supply the New Zealand Steel mill, south of Auckland.
The company has a conditional agreement to supply the mill with 9000 tonnes of Green Coke, and has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with New Zealand Steel owner BlueScope, providing potential access to world steel-making markets.
The offer invites
the public to invest amounts from $1000, and has a target of
$400,000 and a cap of $1.5 million. While it is a 45-day
offer, it will close sooner if it reaches the cap before
then.
Executive director Tim Langley says that the
company is pleased with the response so far.
“We have
been contacted by some well-resourced international
investors, looking to take around $1 million each,” he
said.
Investors he has spoken to are excited by the
potential to do good while making money, he
says.
CarbonScape’s Green Coke is carbon-neutral,
because instead of releasing carbon stored underground
millions of years ago, it is produced from carbon taken from
the atmosphere by trees, and which would be released back
into the atmosphere as the trees
decompose.
CarbonScape’s offer comes as a synthesis
report by the International Panel on Climate Change,
released this week, warns the world that it must stop
burning fossil fuels altogether in order to avoid
irreversible climate damage.
Mr Langley says that if
applied to the steelmaking industry alone, CarbonScape’s
technology has the potential to cut global greenhouse gas
emissions by three per cent a year.
“People get it,”
Mr Langley said. “They understand the cycle, and they
appreciate a product which basically leaves ancient carbon
in the bank.”
CarbonScape is the third crowd-funding
project to use the Snowball Effect platform. The company’s
head of pipeline and services, Shaun Edlin, says that New
Zealanders are getting behind the offer.
“There are some exciting developments taking place in the fossil fuel industry, and we are thrilled that we can facilitate New Zealanders in having an opportunity to participate from those changes,” he said.
CarbonScape’s other products include activated carbon (used for purifying food, air and water), chemicals and syngas.
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