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Heirloom, a climate tech company, secures additional Japanese investment in advance of Japan's carbon markets launch

Heirloom, a company that specializes in climate technology, announced on Tuesday it had received additional funding from Japanese companies as Japan prepares to expand the carbon market by 2026.

The Development Bank of Japan, engineering group Chiyoda Corp and the Californian company did not reveal the amount of investment or the valuation of the money raised.

Heirloom raised $150 million in a Series B funding round from Japanese investors last year including Japan Airlines, Mitsubishi Corp, and Mitsui & Co.

The GX-ETS Carbon Market in Japan, which was launched as a voluntary scheme in 2023, will be mandatory in 2026. It will allow companies to meet their compliance targets by allowing international credits for carbon removal, such as direct-air capture.

Shashank Samala, Heirloom's Chief Executive Officer, said that "these investments from DBJ & Chiyoda strengthen the technical and financial basis for building large-scale direct air collection (DAC) systems. These systems will provide CO2 to clean fuels and enable permanent carbon removal."

Heirloom will open the first commercial direct air capture facility in the United States in Tracy, California, by 2023.

The facility is designed to capture about 1,000 metric tonnes annually. It's part of an expansion aimed at reducing costs from the current levels of $600-$1,000 a ton towards the $100 target set by the U.S. Government. (Reporting and editing by Vijay Kishore in Bengaluru, Yagnoseni das in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)