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Institutional Buyer Activity Supports Mast Reforestation’s Biomass Burial Project

Institutional Buyer Activity Supports Mast Reforestation’s Biomass Burial Project

According to a recent LinkedIn post from Mast Reforestation, Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) has been identified as an early purchaser of carbon credits from Mast’s first biomass burial project, MT1. The post emphasizes that scale, third-party validation, and measurable on-the-ground results appear to be key criteria for major financial institutions considering new carbon removal pathways.

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The company’s LinkedIn post highlights that early buyers such as RBC, which are willing to undertake detailed diligence and operate at the “leading edge” of carbon markets, are described as critical to advancing high-quality, near-term carbon removal. The post also links Mast’s work not only to durable carbon removal but to post-fire recovery and reforestation on the same land, suggesting a combined climate and land-restoration value proposition.

For investors, the involvement of a large financial institution like RBC may signal growing institutional confidence in biomass burial as a viable carbon removal asset class. Such early offtake could help de-risk project financing, support Mast’s revenue visibility for MT1 and future projects, and potentially enhance the company’s positioning with other corporate and financial buyers seeking vetted carbon removal options.

The reference to “future offtake” interest implies that Mast is actively looking to secure longer-term credit purchase agreements, which could improve cash-flow predictability if converted into contracts. More broadly, this type of institutional participation may bolster Mast Reforestation’s standing within the emerging carbon removal and nature-based solutions sector, while also underscoring competitive pressures for verification, durability, and scalability in the voluntary carbon market.

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