According to a recent LinkedIn post from Mast Reforestation, the company highlights that Royal Bank of Canada was an early purchaser of carbon credits from its first biomass burial project, MT1. The post suggests that RBC’s interest was driven by the potential for scalable deployment, third-party validation, and measurable on-the-ground impact.
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The LinkedIn post underscores the importance of early institutional buyers that are willing to conduct detailed due diligence and operate at the frontier of emerging carbon removal pathways. This kind of demand could help Mast Reforestation secure future offtake commitments, potentially improving revenue visibility, supporting project financing, and strengthening its positioning in the rapidly evolving carbon removal and post-fire reforestation markets.
As shared in the post, Mast links its biomass burial projects not only to durable carbon removal but also to post-fire recovery and reforestation on the same land. For investors, this dual focus may enhance the company’s appeal to climate-focused capital, while the involvement of a major financial institution like RBC may be interpreted as a form of market validation that could influence other buyers and partners to engage with similar climate solutions.

