A LinkedIn post from Chestnut Carbon describes a transaction in which BMO is linked to the purchase of 16,466 tonnes of Improved Forest Management carbon credits from project VCS4268. The post suggests this purchase is intended to support BMO’s decarbonization objectives through nature-based carbon removals and forest preservation, as referenced in BMO’s 2025 Sustainability and Climate Report.
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The company’s LinkedIn post also outlines that its Family Forest Carbon Project is a grouped IFM initiative aimed at increasing carbon sequestration on family-owned forestlands by shifting from even-aged timber harvesting to uneven-aged forest management with extended rotation ages. For investors, this activity points to ongoing commercial traction for Chestnut Carbon’s IFM credits and underscores its positioning within the voluntary carbon market, particularly in nature-based solutions.
The described transaction, if part of a broader pattern of institutional demand, could support revenue visibility and pricing power for Chestnut Carbon’s credit portfolio over time. It may also enhance the company’s credibility with financial institutions seeking high-quality offsets, a factor that could be material as regulatory and stakeholder scrutiny of carbon markets continues to intensify.

