According to a recent LinkedIn post from Mast Reforestation, the company describes the loading of its MT1 biomass burial chamber, which it says holds 10 million pounds of fire-killed timber. The narrative, framed around an April Fools’ anecdote about a lost action camera, is used to emphasize that the device is now effectively part of the “geological record” beneath the biomass.
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The post suggests Mast’s MT1 facility is already operating at meaningful physical scale, with thousands of tons of biomass reportedly stacked in the vault. For investors tracking nature-based or engineered carbon removal, this could indicate progress in Mast’s capacity build-out and underline the company’s focus on long-term carbon storage rather than short-term offsets.
By highlighting that neither the camera nor the carbon is “coming back for a long time,” the post implicitly points to the durability of the company’s storage approach. If Mast can verify and monetize this permanence through carbon credit markets or long-term offtake agreements, such infrastructure may support recurring revenue and strengthen its competitive position in the carbon removal and reforestation sector.

