According to a recent LinkedIn post from Capture6, the company has obtained non‑recourse, project-level financing from RSF | Regenerative Social Finance, supported by the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank, to advance Phase 2 of its Monarch facility with Palmdale Water District. The post indicates that Phase 2 is intended to scale Capture6’s integrated carbon removal and water recovery technology.
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The post suggests that the expanded Monarch facility is designed to convert brine, a costly and environmentally challenging byproduct of water recycling, into usable freshwater. Once operational, the project is expected, according to the post, to remove about 25,000 tons of CO₂ annually, reduce brine disposal costs for local ratepayers by up to 40%, and create jobs in California’s Antelope Valley region.
For investors, this financing may signal growing capital-market confidence in early-stage climate infrastructure focused on both carbon removal and water treatment. If successfully executed and replicated, such projects could position Capture6 to benefit from emerging revenue streams tied to carbon markets, water cost savings, and infrastructure partnerships with public agencies.
The involvement of RSF and support from a state-backed entity like iBank may also reduce perceived project risk and help validate the company’s business model in the eyes of institutional investors. More broadly, the deal points to increasing interest in blended climate finance structures that aim to deliver measurable environmental and community benefits alongside potential long-term commercial returns.

