According to a recent LinkedIn post from Mast Reforestation, the company is working with carbon buyers such as RBC that are described as willing to conduct deeper diligence and participate in early-stage carbon removal models. The post highlights that RBC is among the buyers of Mast’s MT1 credits, which are linked to more than 10 million pounds of wildfire-killed trees stored underground in eastern Montana for long-term carbon removal.
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The post also notes that Mast intends to plant 6,000 new seedlings on the same property within one week, with these projects framed as helping to fund post-wildfire reforestation in areas where forests might not otherwise recover. For investors, this suggests Mast is actively commercializing its carbon-credit products while pairing them with on-the-ground reforestation activity, potentially strengthening both future revenue prospects and credibility in the nature-based carbon removal market.
By referencing a buyer such as RBC, the post implies engagement with institutional-caliber counterparties, which may help validate the company’s MT1 credit structure and support future offtake agreements. The stated interest in additional offtake, including via a direct contact channel, points to an ongoing focus on scaling credit sales, a key factor for Mast’s growth trajectory and positioning in the competitive carbon removal and climate-finance ecosystem.

