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§ Private Profile · District 8, Treasury Tower 6th Floor Unit F, SCBD Lot 28, Jl. Jend Sudirman Kav 52-53, Jakarta, Indonesia, 12190
Technology-enabled seaweed company providing high-quality spore seedlings and farming techniques for smallholder farmers in Indonesia.
Based in Greater Jakarta, Indonesia, Banyu is a technology-enabled aquaculture company that provides smallholder seaweed farmers with high-quality spore seedlings and advanced cultivation techniques. The enterprise operates an integrated supply chain model that facilitates global market access and supports downstream applications for commercial seaweed, including biofertilizers, bioplastics, and animal feed. Utilizing proprietary seedling production methods, the company helps farmers increase their crop yields by up to 20 percent compared to traditional harvesting practices. Operating with a team of 1 to 10 employees, the firm recently secured $1.25 million in seed funding led by Intudo Ventures to establish new seedling cultivation laboratories and expand operations across Sulawesi. Banyu was founded in December 2023 by a leadership team that includes chief executive officer and co-founder Dodon Yamin, chief sustainability officer Anis Nur Aini, and president commissioner Anthony Kwik.
Banyu has raised $1.0M across 1 funding round.
Banyu has raised $1.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Banyu has raised $1.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $1.0M Seed in January 2025.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1, 2025 | $1M Seed | — | 500 Global, Intudo Ventures | Announced |
Banyu Carbon is a climate technology startup developing a low-energy, photochemical process for marine carbon dioxide removal (CDR) using sunlight and seawater. It serves the environmental and carbon removal sectors by addressing the high energy demands of existing CDR technologies through a synthetic "photoacid" molecule that scrubs CO2 from seawater when exposed to blue light, then releases it for capture while returning decarbonized water to the ocean.[2][3]
The company solves the core challenge of energy-intensive carbon removal, promising 90% less energy use than electrochemical ocean CDR methods and even generating surplus electricity via integrated photovoltaics. With early lab-scale success (grams of CO2 removed), Banyu is scaling to pilots removing tens of kilograms this year and a commercial demo targeting 360 metric tons by 2026 under a Frontier contract, at costs potentially dropping to $60/ton at massive scale.[2][3]
(Note: A separate Indonesian startup named Banyu, founded in 2024, focuses on tech-driven seaweed farming, but the query aligns more closely with Banyu Carbon's prominence in tech and carbon tech ecosystems.[1])
Banyu Carbon was spun out of the University of Washington in 2022 by co-founders Alex Gagnon (CEO, chemical oceanography professor) and Julian Sachs (CTO, marine organic chemist with Pacific fieldwork experience).[2][3] The name "Banyu" draws from the Indonesian word for seawater, reflecting Sachs' background. The idea emerged from Gagnon's research into energy-efficient CDR, tackling the "ton of energy" required by traditional methods like electrochemical processes that mineralize CO2 into sinking materials.[3]
Early traction includes raising $1.88M (last in 2022, Option/Warrant stage) and securing a high-value contract with Frontier (Stripe-backed fund) for 360 metric tons of removal by 2026 at $1,387/ton. A Washington-state pilot is planned this year for kilogram-scale removal, building toward Gulf of Mexico demos.[2][3]
Banyu Carbon rides the explosive growth of ocean-based CDR and net-zero tech, fueled by corporate carbon markets and mandates (e.g., Frontier's role in validating scalable removal). Timing is ideal amid global CDR demand surging to gigatons annually by 2050, with ocean methods leveraging 70% of Earth's surface for low-cost abatement.[2][3]
Market forces favor it: policy pushes (e.g., US Inflation Reduction Act credits), falling solar costs amplifying photovoltaics, and Stripe/Frontier's $1B+ commitments de-risking pilots. By prioritizing verifiable, low-energy removal over mineralization, Banyu influences the ecosystem toward efficient, deployable solutions—potentially accelerating CDR from <0.01% of needed capacity to mainstream, while enabling CO2 reuse in fuels.[3][4]
Banyu Carbon is poised for rapid scaling: Washington pilot in 2025, Gulf demo fulfilling 360-ton Frontier contract by 2026, then commercial plants targeting millions of tons amid CDR market projected to hit $100B+ by 2030. Trends like cheaper renewables, AI-optimized deployment, and carbon credit standardization will propel it, with CO2 utilization (e.g., fuels) adding revenue streams.
Its influence could evolve from lab innovator to ocean CDR leader, proving sunlight-powered removal viable and pressuring rivals to match efficiency—ultimately helping cap warming by making gigaton-scale drawdown economically feasible.[2][3] This positions Banyu as a pivotal player in the tech-driven race to reverse emissions.
Banyu has raised $1.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Banyu's investors include 500 Global, Intudo Ventures.