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PyroGenesis Supplier Risk Assessment — 2026

Draft High Analysis 3,307 words Created Mar 4, 2026

PyroGenesis Canada Inc. (TSX: PYR) — Supplier Risk Assessment

Prepared for: The Claw Ocean Cleanup Project Date: 2026-03-04 Classification: Critical Dependency Analysis Subject: PyroGenesis as sole-source supplier for PRRS plasma gasification technology


Executive Summary

PyroGenesis Canada Inc. is a high-risk supplier. The company possesses genuinely valuable plasma technology — proven on US Navy aircraft carriers and with a 30+ year engineering pedigree — but is in severe financial distress. With $0.1M cash on hand, a $15.3M working capital deficiency, a stock price that has collapsed 98% from its peak, and active fraud proceedings from Quebec's securities regulator against its CEO, PyroGenesis represents a real going-concern risk. The Claw must treat this as a supplier that could cease operations within 12-24 months and plan accordingly.


1. Company Overview

Founding & History

  • Founded: 1991, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • Founder: P. Peter Pascali (current CEO)
  • Headquarters: Montreal, Quebec
  • Listed: TSX: PYR (Toronto Stock Exchange); PYRGF (OTCQX in the US)
  • Employees: ~107

Core Business Lines

ProductDescriptionStatus
PAWDSPlasma Arc Waste Destruction System — shipboard waste-to-energy for US NavyDeployed on USS Gerald R. Ford, USS John F. Kennedy
PRRSPlasma Resource Recovery System — municipal/industrial waste gasificationThe Claw's target technology. Land-based systems demonstrated
DROSRITEAluminum dross processing systemRevenue-generating but declining
PUREVAPPlasma-based silicon/quartz purificationRevenue from Constellium contract
Plasma TorchesIndustrial plasma torches for various applicationsOngoing sales
NexGenMetal powder production for additive manufacturing/3D printingPatented, in development

Major Customers

  • US Navy (via Huntington Ingalls / Newport News Shipbuilding) — PAWDS on Gerald R. Ford-class carriers
  • Constellium — aluminum furnace electrification using plasma torches
  • Carnival Cruise Lines — PAWDS installed on M/S Fantasy (early deployment)
  • Various industrial clients for torch systems

Market Cap & Stock Price

MetricValue
Current stock price~CAD $0.17-0.33 (varies by date, late 2025 to early 2026)
All-time highCAD $9.43 (February 19, 2021)
Decline from peak~98%
Market cap~CAD $60-90M (fluctuating)
The stock has been in unrelenting decline since the 2021 meme-stock era peak. This is not a temporary dip — it is a five-year death spiral.


2. Financial Health — Current State

Revenue History

YearRevenueYoY ChangeNotes
2022$19.0MBest recent year
2023$12.3M-35%Sharp decline across all segments
2024$15.7M+27%Partial recovery
2025 (9 months)$9.2M-19% vs same period 2024Declining again
Revenue is volatile and trending poorly. The 2024 recovery did not sustain into 2025.

2025 Quarterly Breakdown

QuarterRevenueYoY Change
Q1 2025$3.0M-14%
Q2 2025$3.0M-24%
Q3 2025$3.2M-19%

Balance Sheet (as of September 30, 2025)

ItemAmount
Cash on hand$0.1M (one hundred thousand dollars)
Working capital deficiency($15.3M)
Total debt~$5.95M
Operating cash flow (TTM)($1.91M)
Free cash flow (TTM)($2.13M)
Debt-to-equityNegative (equity eroded)

Profitability

PyroGenesis is not profitable and has never been consistently profitable. Recent losses:

PeriodNet Loss
FY 2022($32.2M)
FY 2023($28.5M)
FY 2024($6.7M) — improvement but still losing
Q2 2025($2.9M) quarterly loss
Q3 2025($2.3M) quarterly loss

Capital Raises (Survival Funding)

The company has been repeatedly going to market for emergency capital:

  • $5.75M private placement (2025) — led by CEO Pascali personally
  • $3.5M private placement (October 2025) — Pascali invested again at $0.63/share
  • $2.8M private placement (2025) — additional raise
  • Warrant repricing from $1.20 to $0.63 to incentivize exercise
These are not growth raises — they are survival raises. The CEO is personally funding the company to keep lights on.

Burn Rate & Runway

At approximately $2-3M quarterly net loss and $0.1M cash on hand, PyroGenesis has effectively zero runway without continued capital raises. The company is dependent on: 1. Contract milestone payments from the $51.6M backlog 2. Continued private placements 3. CEO's personal willingness and ability to keep funding

Going Concern

While auditor going-concern language was not found in search results, the financial profile — $0.1M cash, $15.3M working capital deficiency, negative equity, recurring losses — is the textbook definition of going-concern risk. The company's own Q3 2025 filing acknowledges it "expects that with its cash, liquidity position, the proceeds available from the strategic investment and its access to capital markets it will be able to finance its operations for the foreseeable future." This is corporate-speak for "we need to keep raising money or we die."


3. AMF Proceedings

What Happened

The Autorite des marches financiers (AMF), Quebec's securities regulator, launched formal proceedings against:

  • PyroGenesis Canada Inc. (the company)
  • P. Peter Pascali (CEO, founder)
  • Alan Curleigh (director, board chair)

The Allegations

The case centers on a 2018 transaction with Phoenix Haute Technology, a company controlled by Pascali's late father. In 2011, PyroGenesis acquired IP from Phoenix. In 2018, a $5.5M claim related to that purchase was settled by issuing $3.7M in PyroGenesis units to Phoenix — a related-party transaction.

The AMF alleges: 1. Fraud (Section 199.1(2) of the Quebec Securities Act) — against Pascali personally 2. Misrepresentation in a prospectus (Sections 196, 197) — against Pascali and the company 3. Failure to comply with disclosure obligations — against Pascali and the company 4. Breach of fiduciary duties as directors — against Pascali and Curleigh

Penalties Sought

TargetPenaltyAmount
PascaliAdministrative penalties$4.2M
PascaliDisgorgement order$9.57M
CompanyAdministrative penalties$550K
Pascali & CurleighDirector/officer ban5 years

Timeline

  • Investigation disclosed: 2023
  • Proceedings launched: 2023
  • Current status: Believed to be ongoing (no resolution found in public sources as of early 2026)
  • AMF proceedings typically take 2-5 years to resolve

Impact Assessment

This is extremely serious:

  • If Pascali is banned as an officer for 5 years, PyroGenesis loses its founder, CEO, and the person who has been personally funding the company through private placements
  • The fraud allegations (not just regulatory violations — actual fraud) damage the company's ability to raise capital from institutional investors
  • The $13.77M in potential personal penalties against Pascali could impair his ability/willingness to continue funding the company
  • Even if settled for less, the reputational damage to a company this small is significant

4. Contract Pipeline & Revenue Visibility

US Navy PAWDS Program

ShipClassPAWDS StatusExpected Delivery
USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78)Gerald R. FordDelivered & deployedIn service since 2022
USS John F. Kennedy (CVN-79)Gerald R. FordDeliveredShip deploying ~2025
USS Enterprise (CVN-80)Gerald R. FordUnder contractShip launch ~2029
USS Doris Miller (CVN-81)Gerald R. FordUnder contractShip launch ~2032

Contract Backlog

  • Total backlog: $51.6M (as of Q3 2025, USD-denominated)
  • This sounds impressive but backlog recognition stretches over many years
  • Annual revenue has been running ~$12-16M — the backlog represents roughly 3-4 years of revenue at current run rates
  • Navy contracts are milestone-based — cash arrives when milestones are hit, not upfront

Revenue by Segment (2023 — most recent detailed breakdown)

Segment2023 Revenue2022 RevenueChange
US Navy support services$3.25M$1.29M+152%
Torch sales$3.40M$5.56M-39%
Biogas upgrading$1.71M$3.35M-49%
PUREVAP$1.66M$6.27M-74%
DROSRITE$0.54M$1.91M-72%
Refrigerant destruction$0.61M$0New
Other$1.19M$0.63M+88%

Revenue Concentration Risk

The Navy is becoming the largest and most stable revenue source. This creates dependency on:

  • US defense budgets (currently strong, but politically volatile)
  • A single prime contractor (Huntington Ingalls Industries)
  • A ship class with only 4 planned units

After-Sales Revenue

After-sales contracts (spare parts, maintenance) for the Ford-class carriers provide a recurring revenue stream — most recently a US$741K purchase order for after-sales components. This is modest but stable.


5. Technology IP & Licensing

Patent Portfolio

PyroGenesis claims 54+ patents (issued and pending) globally as of 2017 announcements, with continued grants since:

  • U.S. Patent No. 9,447,705 — waste heat recovery in plasma gasification processes
  • Multiple patents on plasma torch design, plasma atomization (NexGen), waste destruction
  • European patent for destruction of ozone-depleting substances (granted January 2025)
  • CTO Pierre Carabin is inventor or co-inventor on nearly 40 patents

IP Ownership

All patents are assigned to PyroGenesis Canada, Inc. — the public company. They are corporate assets.

Bankruptcy Scenario — What Happens to IP

If PyroGenesis enters bankruptcy or creditor protection (CCAA in Canada): 1. Patents become assets of the estate — they go to the highest bidder 2. A receiver or monitor would be appointed to maximize creditor recovery 3. The IP portfolio would likely be auctioned — potentially to a defense contractor, private equity firm, or competitor 4. The Claw would have no preferential access unless it had a pre-existing license or was a creditor 5. The buyer could be anyone — including a competitor who might shelve the technology

Could the Technology Be Licensed Independently?

Currently, no — PyroGenesis offers systems, not licenses. However:

  • A technology license agreement is theoretically negotiable
  • Given their financial position, they might be very receptive to a licensing deal that brings cash
  • The PRRS specifically has been demonstrated but is not in serial production — licensing might appeal to them as a way to monetize without capital expenditure

6. Key Personnel Risk

Critical Technical Personnel

PersonRoleImportance
Pierre CarabinCTO & Chief StrategistCritical. 25+ years in plasma engineering, inventor/co-inventor on ~40 patents, leads all engineering, McGill MEng
P. Peter PascaliCEO & FounderBusiness driver, personally funding the company, but facing AMF proceedings
Engineering team~107 employees total (not all engineers)Montreal-based, experienced with plasma torch design and integration

Knowledge Concentration

Pierre Carabin is the single most critical technical person. He has been at PyroGenesis for 18+ years and is the principal inventor on most of the company's IP. Plasma torch engineering is a deep specialty — there are probably fewer than 50 people in North America who truly understand high-power DC plasma torch design at the level needed for waste gasification systems.

The practical knowledge of how to:

  • Design and tune a plasma torch for specific waste streams
  • Integrate a torch system into a reactor vessel
  • Handle the thermal management, electrode erosion, and gas chemistry
  • Marinize a system for shipboard operation (vibration, salt air, pitch/roll)
...is largely in the heads of Carabin and a small team of senior engineers. Patents describe what was built, not necessarily all the engineering know-how to build the next one.

Could The Claw Hire Engineers Directly?

If PyroGenesis collapsed:

  • The Montreal engineering team would be available for hire
  • Pierre Carabin would be the #1 target — securing him would transfer the most institutional knowledge
  • Non-compete clauses would likely not survive a bankruptcy (debatable under Quebec law, but generally unenforceable if employer ceases to exist)
  • The Claw would need to offer competitive compensation and relocation (or establish a Montreal engineering office)
  • Risk: Defense contractors (Huntington Ingalls, General Dynamics) might also recruit the best engineers for their own programs

7. Mitigation Strategies

Option A: Technology License

Description: Negotiate a license to the PRRS design, including detailed engineering drawings, BOMs, and manufacturing procedures.

FactorAssessment
FeasibilityMedium-High. PyroGenesis needs cash and might welcome a license fee
CostEstimated $2-5M upfront + royalties per unit
AdvantagesSecured access to design regardless of PyroGenesis's fate; could manufacture independently or through third parties
DisadvantagesLicense may not include tacit engineering knowledge; manufacturing plasma torches requires specialized capability
RecommendationPursue immediately — this is the highest-priority mitigation

Option B: Equity Stake / Strategic Investment

Description: Invest in PyroGenesis for a board seat, technology access agreement, and influence over company direction.

FactorAssessment
FeasibilityHigh. At current market cap (~$60-90M CAD), a meaningful stake is affordable
Cost$5-15M CAD for a 10-20% stake + board seat
AdvantagesVisibility into company health, influence over strategic decisions, preferred access to technology
DisadvantagesYou're investing in a distressed company with AMF fraud proceedings against its CEO; equity could go to zero; you'd be a minority shareholder
RecommendationConsider only if combined with Option A — equity alone provides no protection if the company fails

Option C: Acqui-Hire Key Engineers

Description: If PyroGenesis fails, immediately recruit Pierre Carabin and the senior plasma engineering team to build capability in-house.

FactorAssessment
FeasibilityMedium. Depends on timing and competition from defense contractors
Cost$500K-1M/year in salaries for a core team of 3-5 engineers
AdvantagesGets the actual knowledge holders; Montreal is a reasonable location for an engineering office
DisadvantagesReactive, not proactive — by the time PyroGenesis collapses, IP may have been sold to someone else; engineers may have already taken other jobs
RecommendationPrepare as a contingency — establish relationships with key engineers now, but don't rely on this as primary strategy

Option D: Backup Supplier

Description: Identify and qualify an alternative plasma gasification system supplier.

See Section 8 below for detailed analysis. Summary: There is no drop-in replacement for PyroGenesis's marine-proven PRRS/PAWDS technology. Alternatives exist but would require significant integration engineering.

Option E: Stockpile Critical Spares

Description: Pre-order plasma torches, electrodes, power supplies, and other consumables/wear items.

FactorAssessment
FeasibilityHigh — these are catalog items for PyroGenesis
Cost$700K-2M for a multi-year supply of torches and electrodes
AdvantagesOperational insurance; electrodes are consumables that need regular replacement
DisadvantagesDoesn't solve the "build a new system" problem, only extends operational life of existing systems
RecommendationDo this regardless — it's cheap insurance and makes sense operationally

Recommended Strategy

Pursue Options A + E immediately, prepare Option C as contingency:

1. Now: Open licensing discussions with PyroGenesis. Their financial desperation makes this the best negotiating window. Aim for a perpetual, irrevocable license to the PRRS technology including all engineering documentation. 2. Now: Place an order for spare torches, electrodes, and critical components. This also gives PyroGenesis revenue they desperately need, building goodwill. 3. Now: Establish personal relationships with Pierre Carabin and the senior engineering team. Attend technical conferences, visit the Montreal facility, build rapport. 4. If things deteriorate further: Be prepared to bid on IP assets in a CCAA proceeding, and/or recruit the engineering team. 5. Parallel: Begin evaluating Westinghouse Plasma torches as a potential alternative torch source for a custom-designed reactor.


8. Alternative Plasma Suppliers

The Graveyard of Plasma Gasification Companies

The plasma waste-to-energy sector has a brutal track record. Most companies that attempted commercial-scale plasma gasification have failed:

CompanyWhat HappenedCurrent Status
Plasco Energy Group (Ottawa, Canada)Failed to receive government funding for Ottawa plant; entered creditor protection 2015Purchased out of protection, pivoted to equipment supply only. Minimally active
AlterNRG / Westinghouse Plasma (Calgary/Madison)AlterNRG acquired Westinghouse Plasma Corp in 2007; struggled commerciallyNow owned by Sunshine Kaidi (Chinese). Westinghouse Plasma Corp continues as a licensing entity. ~$5.6M revenue (2025). Still operational
Europlasma / CHO Power (France)Built 11MWe CHO Morcenx plant. Struggled with commissioning and economicsStill operational. CHO TIPER (10MW) project with EIB EUR 30M loan. Limited scale
Air Products (Waste-to-energy division)Wrote down $0.9-1.0 BILLION in 2016 exiting waste-to-energyCompletely exited the sector
InEnTec (Oregon, USA)Plasma-enhanced gasification, smaller scaleActive but niche

Viable Alternatives for The Claw

Westinghouse Plasma Company is the most credible alternative:

  • Successor to Westinghouse's plasma torch division (heritage dating to the 1960s)
  • Manufactures plasma torch systems and licenses gasification technology
  • Has operational systems (Tees Valley, UK — though that project had issues)
  • Torch technology could potentially be integrated into a custom PRRS-style reactor
  • Key difference: Westinghouse sells torches and licenses technology — they don't build turnkey waste-to-energy systems the way PyroGenesis does for the Navy
Terragon Environmental Technologies (Montreal):
  • Makes the MAGS (Micro Auto Gasification System) for shipboard waste treatment
  • Already deployed on military and commercial vessels
  • Uses auto-gasification, NOT plasma — lower temperature, simpler, but different performance envelope
  • Could be a complementary or fallback technology for easier waste fractions
Custom Build Option:
  • Industrial plasma torches are manufactured by several companies (Thermal Dynamics, Hypertherm, etc.)
  • A competent engineering team could design a custom gasification reactor around commercially available plasma torches
  • This is what PyroGenesis essentially did — the torch is the key component, the reactor is engineered around it
  • With a licensed PRRS design (Option A) or acqui-hired engineers (Option C), this becomes feasible

Is PyroGenesis Truly the Only Option?

No, but it is the best option. Here's why:

1. Marine-proven: PAWDS is the only plasma waste system deployed and operational on major naval vessels. No competitor can claim this. 2. Engineering maturity: 30+ years of torch development, dozens of patents, iterative improvements from real deployments. 3. Navy qualification: The US Navy qualification process took years. Starting over with a different supplier would add 3-5 years to The Claw's timeline. 4. Marinization knowledge: The specific engineering of making plasma gasification work on a ship (vibration, motion, salt environment, space constraints) is not trivial and is not well-documented in public literature.

However, plasma gasification is based on well-understood physics. The torch technology is not magic — it is specialized engineering. With the right team and sufficient investment, a custom system could be built. It would just take longer and cost more than buying from PyroGenesis.


9. Risk Rating

Overall Supplier Risk: HIGH

Not yet critical — the company is still operating, still delivering on Navy contracts, and still has a $51.6M backlog. But the trajectory is alarming.

Detailed Risk Ratings

Risk CategoryRatingRationale
Financial riskCRITICAL$0.1M cash, $15.3M working capital deficiency, ~$8-10M annual losses, dependent on CEO personal funding. One missed capital raise from insolvency
Regulatory/Legal riskHIGHAMF fraud proceedings could result in CEO being banned as officer for 5 years. This would be an existential event for a founder-led company
Technology riskLOW-MEDIUMThe technology works, is proven, and is protected by patents. Even if the company fails, the IP and knowledge exist
Key person riskHIGHCTO Pierre Carabin is the single point of failure for technical knowledge. CEO Pascali is the single point of failure for company survival (personal funding + AMF risk)
Supply continuity riskHIGHIf PyroGenesis enters creditor protection, all production stops. Lead times for plasma torches and systems would become indefinite
Reputational riskMEDIUMThe Claw associating with a company under fraud investigation could create PR issues, though this is manageable

Probability of Failure Scenarios (next 3 years)

ScenarioEstimated Probability
Company continues operating, depleted but alive40%
Acquired by defense/industrial company (technology preserved)25%
Enters CCAA creditor protection, assets sold piecemeal20%
AMF proceedings force CEO departure, company restructures10%
Rapid financial collapse, disorderly shutdown5%

Recommendation for The Claw

Do not proceed with PyroGenesis as a sole-source supplier without contractual protections. Specifically:

1. Negotiate a perpetual, irrevocable technology license for the PRRS system including all engineering documentation, manufacturing drawings, and operating procedures. Do this NOW while they need the money. This is the single most important risk mitigation.

2. Include IP escrow provisions in any contract — if PyroGenesis enters creditor protection or ceases operations, all technical documentation automatically transfers to The Claw.

3. Pre-order critical long-lead components (plasma torches, power supplies, electrodes) and hold them in inventory.

4. Build relationships with the engineering team — particularly Pierre Carabin. If the company fails, these people are the technology.

5. Begin parallel evaluation of Westinghouse Plasma torches as a fallback torch source. Even if you use PyroGenesis's reactor design, having a second-source torch supplier reduces dependency.

6. Do NOT take an equity position unless it comes with ironclad technology access provisions. Equity in a distressed company with fraud allegations is a donation, not an investment.

7. Monitor quarterly — watch cash position, capital raises, and AMF proceedings. Set a tripwire: if cash drops below $0 and no raise is announced within 30 days, activate contingency plans.

The technology is real and valuable. The company holding it is in serious trouble. Separate the two.


Sources