Posted on 06/15/2024 8:02:03 AM PDT by Steven Scharf
Portland Press Herald
Portland startup that became global leader in capturing carbon shuts down, lays off all staff
Running Tide, which raised more than $50 million from private investors since it was founded in 2017, fell victim to a collapse in voluntary carbon market prices, its CEO says.
June 15, 2024 Kelley Bouchard, Staff Writer
A Portland-based startup that pioneered ocean carbon-removal technology, and sold credits to offset the emissions of major clients such as Microsoft, shut down and laid off its last employees on Friday because it could no longer sell enough carbon credits to survive, its CEO said.
Running Tide, which had more than 120 workers at its peak, laid off its remaining 32 U.S. employees on Friday, most of whom were based in Portland, CEO Marty Odlin said. Fifteen workers in Iceland, near one of the company’s carbon sequestration sites, also lost their jobs.
Friday’s layoffs, which culminated with a final morning staff meeting at the company’s buoy engineering facility on the Portland Fish Pier, followed several rounds of layoffs that started in November, Odlin said.
“It’s a sad day,” he said in a phone interview. “We built incredible technologies, but the voluntary carbon market just got a lot smaller in the last nine months. We were building this for a growing market and all of a sudden it was shrinking. There isn’t enough demand right now.”
Founded in 2017, after Odlin sold his family’s groundfishing fleet, Atlantic Trawlers, Running Tide had raised more than $50 million in private investment as a trailblazer in the battle against climate change.
It developed technology to deploy pucks of limestone-coated wood waste and balls of kelp in the ocean, where they would capture carbon and sink to the seabed or be eaten by marine animals. It also built and deployed 546 sensors off the Maine coast to monitor environmental impacts in the ocean and operated an oyster hatchery in Harpswell for nearly four years.
Having removed the equivalent of 25,000 tons of carbon dioxide and delivered 21,000 credits since its founding, Running Tide had become the largest company in the world to trap carbon without taking it directly from the air or point of emission. It had 30 academic and commercial partners, 25 enterprise customers, including Microsoft and the e-commerce platform Shopify, and 12,000 total purchasers, according to its website.
Odlin said the collapse of the carbon market became obvious last September. By January, carbon offset prices had tumbled more than 80% over the previous 20 months and the market was suffering from declining confidence and weakening demand, according to CarbonCredits.com.
“This price decline reflects the broader challenges facing the voluntary carbon market, including questions about the actual environmental impact of the credits and the integrity of projects claiming to offset emissions,” the industry analyst reported.
Odlin said a lack of support and investment from the U.S. government kept Running Tide from growing beyond a research-sized enterprise into the massive program needed to offset carbon emissions and claw back climate change.
“We’ve really been let down by our government,” Odlin said. “We did our jobs. We fulfilled our contracts. We brought a lot of money into the Maine economy. But this was still at research scale. This needs to be a thousand times larger at industrial scale and it’s going to take a ton of government leadership to get us there.”
Running Tide employees declined to speak with the Press Herald as they left Friday’s final meeting. However, a human resources email provided by one employee showed that Friday was the final payday and they would not be getting severance.
Odlin declined to discuss the company’s exit package but said he reported the layoffs to the Maine Department of Labor, which confirmed it will be helping the workers with job searches and retraining.
Odlin said he’s confident that his employees “will land on their feet” and find new jobs quickly, possibly in the same or a related field.
The company will vacate its leased facilities in Portland, he said, including the buoy engineering shop at the Marine Trade Center on the Portland Fish Pier, now-empty offices at 30 Danforth St. and laboratory space on outer Congress Street.
DISAPPOINTMENT
“Losing Running Tide in the Marine Trade Center is disappointing,” said Bill Needelman, waterfront coordinator for the city of Portland. “We wish the best to their employees. They should reach out to us if they need anything.”
The engineering space in the trade center is next door to the Portland Harbor Master’s offices.
“They brought a lot of vitality to the pier in the last two years,” said Maya Howard, assistant harbor master. “They had a lot of young people working with them, conducting experiments, monitoring tanks, collecting data.”
Running Tide had inked a new agreement with Microsoft in March 2023 to remove the equivalent of 12,000 tons of carbon dioxide over the next two years.
Shopify purchased credits from Running Tide as part of a $5 million annual effort to support entrepreneurs working to reverse climate change.
Odlin notified both companies that Running Tide is shutting down, he said. A spokesperson for Microsoft declined to answer questions about the company’s closure. Shopify could not be reached for comment.
Odlin said he’s proud of Running Tide’s accomplishments and he believes the technologies it developed will contribute to continuing efforts to control carbon emissions.
“It’s incredible that this started here in Maine, ” he said. “This work is going to continue. I have a lot of hope.”
I live here in Portland, but apparently travel in the wrong circles as I have never heard of this company.
The City of Portland was one of their landlords so we are on the hook for lost rent (which I assume the city will just forgive and forget).
It is the government's fault: Odlin said a lack of support and investment from the U.S. government kept Running Tide from growing
“Capturing carbon”
Good God these people are insane.
In other words, GOVERNMENT MONEY, regulation and mandates to use the product.
Capturing carbon on a carbon based planet is an impossible job you’ll never make a dent in it ,LOL
How in the world did it sell carbon credits? What is a carbon credit?
We have arrived in the US where we manufacture nothing but scams to designed to get government or other people’s money albeit they are one and the same.
If governments want to eliminate “carbon” they need to announce they are going to start selling carbon and providing it, for free, to “underserved communities.”
You mean to tell me that selling b.s. ISN’T a successful business model?! I guess we need more government mandates and “incentives”!
because it could no longer sell enough carbon credits to survive, its CEO said.
easy money leads to foolish decisions. We are about to enter tough times. decisions will get better.
TOUGH TIMES IS THE CURE.
all they sold was fake guilt relief to people who are self-loathers who think that people are a virus that is ruining the world- many gullible people fell for the sham- always feeling guilty about being alive and enjoying life-
I’m gonna start selling ‘glance insurance’ that will protect people from other people’s glances towards them- I’ll call the company “Sir Glance-a-lot”
Trees 1
company Running Tide 0
“...carbon credits...”
It’s like creating a small paper coupon, then selling it for $100 to a dumb democrat sucker who will be told they can redeem it for a $5 sandwich at a carbon grocery store.
John Kerry would call this scheme a great way to create jobs and revenue. /spit
2021 will probably be remembered as the year when carbon finance emerged as a talking point among a wide range of industries.
......
The Taskforce on Scaling Voluntary Carbon Markets, sponsored by the Institute of International Finance with support from McKinsey, estimates that the market for carbon credits could be worth upward of $50 billion as soon as 2030.
Some people go to prison for scams like this. But people like Al Gore are free to run these scams.
The scam has ran it’s course. Ran out of suckers.
I planted a couple of trees last year. Does that count?
“I planted a couple of trees last year. Does that count?”
Considering the carbon footprint it would take to get those little balls of wood waste on the ocean floor you probably did better than they did with your 2 trees.
Any here invest their money in carbon credits?
I planted a couple of trees last year. Does that count?
I did to, thinking about the shade I will enjoy in the future.
Reminds me of an old bachelor when I was growing up, Rich Sweppe, planting walnuts at age 85.
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