- Heirloom has raised $150 million in Series B funding co-led by Future Positive and Lowercarbon Capital.
- New investors include Japan Airlines, Mitsubishi Corporation, Mitsui, Siemens Financial Services, and H&M Group.
- The funding aims to reduce costs of Direct Air Capture technology and finance new projects.
- Heirloom is part of the Project Cypress team, which has support for up to $600 million in government funding.
- The company plans to create nearly 1,000 jobs in Louisiana with one million tons of CO2 removal capacity.
- Heirloom's first commercial DAC facility began operation in Tracy, California, recently signed a significant carbon removal deal with Microsoft.
- The company has contracts for carbon removal with major firms like Stripe, Meta, and JPMorgan.
- Heirloom’s technology uses limestone to capture CO2 efficiently, reducing absorption time from years to just three days.
- The CO2 captured is permanently stored underground after extraction using renewable energy.
- JP Morgan Securities served as the lead placement agent, while HSBC acted as the co-placement agent for the funding raise.
Heirloom Raises $150 Million Series B to Rapidly Scale Commercial Direct Air Capture:
Investors include premier growth investors, global industrial conglomerates, aviation, shipping, automotive, and manufacturing companies
December 04, 2024 07:00 AM Eastern Standard Time
BRISBANE, Calif.--(
BUSINESS WIRE)--
Heirloom, America’s leading Direct Air Capture (DAC) technology provider, has raised $150 million in Series B funding. The round was co-led by Future Positive, and Lowercarbon Capital - which also invested in Heirloom’s Series A. A range of new industrial investors, including Japan Airlines Co., Ltd., Mitsubishi Corporation (Americas), Mitsui & Co., Ltd., and Siemens Financial Services, representing difficult to decarbonize sectors of the economy – automotive, shipping, aviation, and advanced manufacturing — also participated. This is a strong vote of confidence in Heirloom’s ability to be a leading pathway to net zero. The funding will be used to continue to drive down the cost of the technology, develop additional projects and provide the funding needed to subsequently access infrastructure capital.
New investors in Series B include: Future Positive, H&M Group, Japan Airlines Co., Ltd., Mitsubishi Corporation (Americas), Mitsui & Co., Ltd., MOL Switch LLC, Quantum Innovation Fund, and Siemens Financial Services among others.
Repeat investors include leading climate and carbon removal investors like Ahren Innovation Capital, Breakthrough Energy Ventures, Carbon Direct Capital, Lowercarbon Capital, and MCJ Collective.
“We’re honored to receive this vote of confidence from new and repeat investors alike,” said Shashank Samala, CEO of Heirloom. “We believe DAC is all about cost, cost, and cost – and that it will only scale to make a meaningful difference on climate change if it is affordable. This is precisely why people are investing in Heirloom. Through our real-world deployments and continued technological advancements, we are demonstrating not only that Heirloom has a clear trajectory to the lowest-cost DAC solution – but that we are executing on that vision and delivering results.”
The breadth of participation in Heirloom’s Series B speaks to the company’s industry leadership, technical progress and deployment momentum.
Since its founding in 2020, Heirloom has progressed rapidly to become one of the world’s leading DAC companies. Heirloom is part of the team building Project Cypress — a Department of Energy supported DAC Hub, which is eligible for up to $600 million in government funding, and which will bring one million tons of yearly CO2 removal capacity to Louisiana and will create nearly 1,000 new jobs. Heirloom has received strong bi-partisan U.S. political support, as demonstrated by their recently unveiled plans for a number of Louisiana facilities, including an initial 17,000 ton facility set to be operational in 2026. Late last year, Heirloom
began operating North America’s first commercial DAC facility in Tracy, California, shortly after
signing one of the largest CO2 removal deals to date with Microsoft. The company
has also signed deals to provide carbon removal to Stripe, Meta, Shopify, JPMorgan, McKinsey, Workday, H&M Group, Autodesk, and others.
Heirloom’s technology enhances the power of limestone – the world’s second most abundant, and one of the cheapest, minerals – to capture CO2 directly from the air. The Heirloom process starts with natural limestone, nearly 50% of which is CO2. By extracting this CO2 from the limestone and adding water, the Heirloom process creates a material that is thirsty for CO2 so it can return to a natural limestone state. This material acts like a sponge, pulling CO2 from the atmosphere. Heirloom’s technology accelerates this process, reducing the time it takes to absorb CO2 in nature from years to just three days. Once the CO2 is absorbed, it is extracted from the limestone material using a renewable energy-powered kiln and stored permanently underground.
JP Morgan Securities LLC served as the lead placement agent and HSBC served as the co-placement agent to Heirloom on the raise.
To learn more about Heirloom, visit our website:
www.heirloomcarbon.comContacts
Scott Coriell
press@heirloomcarbon.com