According to a recent LinkedIn post from Mast Reforestation, the company highlights its MT1 project, where 10 million pounds of dead, burned biomass were buried rather than burned or left to decompose. The post suggests this intervention corresponds to 4,277 tonnes of CO₂e removed by placing the material underground in a low-oxygen environment for an expected duration of at least 100 years.
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The post indicates that this carbon removal activity is already helping fund reforestation on the same landscape, with planting reported as underway in April. For investors, the described project may illustrate Mast Reforestation’s ability to convert wildfire-damaged biomass into verifiable long-duration carbon removal, potentially strengthening its positioning in the carbon credits market and enhancing revenue prospects tied to nature-based climate solutions.
If the carbon storage integrity and monitoring claims are validated by third-party standards, this type of project could support premium pricing for credits relative to shorter-term offsets. The emphasis on linking carbon burial directly to funding reforestation may also appeal to buyers seeking combined climate and ecosystem restoration impacts, which could help Mast Reforestation differentiate its offering in an increasingly competitive carbon removal and forest-restoration space.

