Commercial deals, the company's plant patent, and California regulatory authorization drive business momentum and speed product commercialization
KAILUA-KONA, Hawaii, July 13, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Agricultural technology company Blue Ocean Barns completed a $20 million Series A funding round, enabling the company to dramatically expand farming and commercial adoption of Brominata™, its seaweed-based digestive aid for cattle.
The all-natural seaweed, which Blue Ocean Barns' business model ensures is made available at no cost to farmers, has been shown in published research and on-farm trials to safely eliminate more than 80 percent of cows' methane production without changing the taste of milk or meat. The seaweed is added to cattle feed in tiny daily amounts — 0.3% of their overall diet. The natural remedy then stops the formation of methane in the cow's rumen, nearly eliminating the emission of the potent greenhouse gas through burps. The methane from burps from one cow is equivalent to the greenhouse gases emitted by one passenger car.
The Series A round, led by Valor Siren Ventures, includes Tao Capital Partners and strategic investors. The funding brings Blue Ocean Barns' total capital raised to nearly $27 million.
"Methane emissions from cattle, a byproduct of the digestive process, is the largest source of emissions in dairy production. The Blue Ocean Barns' team is focused on solving this massive problem for the industry and uniquely committed to providing the product for free to farmers in partnership with its corporate customers," said Jon Shulkin, Co-President and Partner at Valor Equity Partners and Valor Siren Ventures Fund Manager. "Our team at Valor Equity Partners is grateful to have the opportunity to back the Blue Ocean Barns team through our investments via Valor Siren Ventures."
Blue Ocean Barns works directly with companies to reduce GHG emissions from livestock within their own milk and beef supply chains, known as Scope 3 reductions. Companies pay Blue Ocean Barns to deliver the seaweed to their farmers; in return, companies earn verified carbon certificates that substantiate the reductions. These certificates are more valuable than so-called carbon offsets, which allow companies to fund climate-remediation projects outside their industry, such as wetlands restoration.
Blue Ocean Barns will use the funding to expand the company's tank-based farming, harvesting, and processing operations. Within the next four years, Blue Ocean Barns and its food company partners are poised to surpass three million tons of net CO2-equivalent emissions reductions annually from one million cows, growing to 100 million cows by the end of the decade. Feeding a sprinkling of Brominata daily to only the dairy cows in the state of California – less than 2% of U.S. cattle -- will have the same annual climate impact as Tesla's global fleet last year.
Blue Ocean Barns was first to market globally with a safe seaweed digestive aid. Among the companies that have become Blue Ocean Barns partners are dairy pioneers Ben & Jerry's, Clover Sonoma, and Straus Family Creamery.
Earlier this year, the company was granted authorization to sell Brominata in California by the state's Department of Food and Agriculture. In addition, the United States Patent and Trademark Office allowed a plant patent for Blue Ocean Barns' Brominata, the first ever such patent for a variety of algae or seaweed.
"Both the climate imperative and the investment opportunity resonated with the organizations that participated in our Series A," said Blue Ocean Barns CEO Joan Salwen. "We are fortunate to bring together these visionary and experienced investors who are both passionate about an enormous impact on global emissions and will help us build on our market leadership."
The adoption of Brominata during this decade is an especially important climate solution because of the greenhouse gas potency of methane, which is both produced and destroyed within the same 12-year period. When companies cut their methane emissions rapidly, they draw down the methane that traps heat in the atmosphere, leading to lower climate temperatures.
For more information visit www.blueoceanbarns.com.
SOURCE Blue Ocean Barns
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