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Adaptavate – Weekly Recap

Adaptavate is a climate-tech company developing carbon-negative building materials, and this weekly summary highlights growing international traction and external recognition for its products. The company’s lime-based Breathaplasta Universal plaster was specified for Kinu House, a renovated holiday home in Niseko, Japan, where it was chosen to improve moisture regulation, prevent mould and support better indoor air quality.

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In the project, the material was left unpainted to showcase its natural finish, underscoring Adaptavate’s focus on both performance and aesthetics in premium renovation and hospitality settings. This reference project signals rising global interest in low-impact, health-oriented materials and supports the firm’s positioning in sustainable construction and retrofit markets.

Adaptavate also advanced its messaging around its carbon-negative wallboard, branded as Black Technology, which it presents as a scalable alternative for the mainstream global wallboard industry. The company estimates that if 10% of current global wallboard demand adopted its solution, it could avoid 10.2 million tonnes of CO₂ equivalent per year while generating 6,240 GWh of renewable energy.

This potential impact aligns Adaptavate with tightening net-zero and embodied-carbon regulations and highlights a sizable market opportunity if adoption materializes at scale. Management communications stress a “planet-positive” strategy that prioritizes environmental performance ahead of profit, while still targeting profitability at international scale and aiming to compete directly with conventional materials.

Further validating its technology, Adaptavate was named one of eight finalists for the Future of BioInvestments Innovation Award organized by Ceresana, focused on high-potential bioeconomy solutions. Founder and CEO Tom Robinson is scheduled to pitch at the FoB:Invest online event, which could improve visibility with institutional and strategic investors interested in climate tech and sustainable construction.

These developments collectively strengthen Adaptavate’s brand, investor visibility and market credibility, particularly in the context of carbon-negative materials. However, the company has not disclosed detailed information on commercialization status, production capacity or regulatory approvals for its wallboard products, leaving key execution and timing questions open for investors assessing long-term revenue prospects.

Overall, the week showcased Adaptavate’s expanding international reference projects and growing third-party recognition, reinforcing its profile as an emerging player in carbon-negative construction materials while underscoring the need for more concrete operational disclosures going forward.

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