Knowledge Base

Cost Model & Funding

CAPEX, OPEX, revenue projections, break-even analysis, comparable project benchmarks, funding gap.

The Claw — Vessel Cost Model

Last updated: 2026-03-04 Status: Research draft — numbers sourced from public data, broker estimates, and industry benchmarks. All figures USD unless noted. Ranges reflect genuine uncertainty, not padding.


1. CAPEX — Phase 1 Vessel Build-Out

Summary

Line ItemLowMidHighNotes
Hull acquisition$12M$18M$25M15-25yr Aframax, current market
Naval architecture & engineering$2M$3.5M$5M~8-12% of conversion cost
Shipyard conversion/retrofit$15M$25M$40MSteelwork, piping, electrical, structural
PRRS plasma unit (1x marinized)$15M$22M$30MLand-based + marinization premium
Syngas cleanup & power generation$4M$6M$9MScrubbers, Jenbacher engine, switchgear
Collection equipment$3M$5M$8MBooms, davits, conveyors, dewatering
Helipad installation$0.8M$1.2M$2MAluminum helideck, lighting, safety
Accommodation upgrade$2M$3M$5M28-person capacity, galley, HVAC
Nav, comms, safety systems$1.5M$2.5M$4MGMDSS, radar, VSAT, lifeboats, fire
Classification & regulatory$1M$1.5M$2.5MDNV/LR design approval, surveys, certs
Commissioning & sea trials$1M$1.5M$2.5MHarbour + sea acceptance trials
Project management & owner's costs$2M$3M$5M18-30 month program
Subtotal before contingency$59.3M$92.2M$138M
Contingency (15-25%)$8.9M$18.4M$34.5M15% low, 20% mid, 25% high
TOTAL CAPEX$68M$111M$173M

Line Item Detail

Hull Acquisition — $12M-$25M

The second-hand Aframax market (80,000-120,000 DWT, ~245m LOA) has been elevated since 2022. Broker data points:

  • 5-year-old Aframax: ~$72M (too expensive, too new for conversion)
  • 15-year-old Aframax: ~$23-25M (broker listings, mid-2025)
  • 20-year-old Aframax: ~$15-20M (estimated from age depreciation curves)
  • 25-year-old Aframax: ~$10-15M (approaching scrap value, but may need more steel renewal)
Sources: VesselsLink market data, ISL tanker market report, Lloyd's List

Key consideration: Older hulls (20-25yr) are cheaper to buy but require more steel renewal during conversion, potentially offsetting the savings. The sweet spot is likely 17-22 years old — cheap enough to justify, young enough to have remaining hull life with moderate steel work. We are NOT buying a vessel to trade cargo for 20 years; we need ~10-15 years of operational life in relatively benign GPGP conditions (low traffic, no port-to-port pounding).

Naval Architecture & Engineering — $2M-$5M

Industry standard for conversion projects: engineering costs run 8-15% of total conversion/retrofit cost. For a $25M-$40M conversion scope, this yields $2M-$6M. Our estimate is conservative because:

  • The vessel's basic hull, propulsion, and accommodation already exist
  • The primary engineering challenge is plasma unit integration (structural reinforcement, exhaust routing, vibration isolation)
  • We need custom work on: waste handling flow, syngas piping, collection system integration
  • Flag state and class approval drawings add significant documentation scope
Source: Cad Crowd naval architecture rates

Shipyard Conversion/Retrofit — $15M-$40M

The largest and most uncertain line item. This covers:

  • Structural steelwork: Reinforcing decks for plasma unit weight (~50-80 tonnes), cutting/welding new openings, foundations
  • Piping systems: Waste feed, water cooling, syngas routing, fire suppression, ballast modifications
  • Electrical: New switchboard for 1-2 MW generation, cable runs, distribution, emergency systems
  • Tank modifications: Converting cargo tanks for waste storage, water ballast reconfiguration
  • Deck equipment: Crane foundations, collection system mounting points, conveyor supports
FPSO conversion benchmarks: Full FPSO conversions (tanker to floating oil production) cost $200M-$500M+, but those include topsides processing equipment worth $100M+. Our conversion scope is much smaller — we're essentially fitting one industrial process unit and collection gear, not a full oil processing plant. The structural and systems integration work is comparable to a small FPSO conversion or an offshore accommodation vessel refit.

Source: Plant FCE — FPSO conversion cost comparison, FPSO market 2025

Shipyard selection matters enormously. China and Turkey offer 30-50% lower labour rates than Singapore, Korea, or Northern Europe. A comparable scope in a Chinese yard might be $15M-$20M; the same work in a European yard could exceed $35M.

PRRS Plasma Unit — $15M-$30M

This is the critical path item and the hardest to price publicly. What we know:

  • PyroGenesis PAWDS (naval shipboard): ~$5M per unit for US Navy aircraft carriers (2-ship contract was $11.5M in 2020). These are smaller systems (~400 lb/hr, ~4.4 TPD) purpose-built for military ships.
  • PyroGenesis PRRS (land-based, larger scale): A European land-based plasma waste-to-energy system was quoted at $120-160M (€80-105M) for a full facility including building, utilities, and grid connection. The plasma reactor itself is a fraction of that — estimated 15-25% of total plant cost, so $18M-$40M for the reactor package alone.
  • PyroGenesis European plastic waste contract (2025): Initial design phase at €379,000 (~$600K) — this is just the feasibility/design work, not hardware.
  • Marinization premium: Naval/marine equipment typically carries a 20-40% premium over land-based equivalents due to vibration isolation, corrosion protection, classification society approval, and marine-grade components.
Our estimate logic:
  • Base PRRS reactor package for 5-10 TPD: $10M-$20M (extrapolated from PAWDS pricing scaled up, cross-referenced with land-based plant reactor fraction)
  • Marinization premium (30%): $3M-$6M
  • Installation engineering (included in shipyard conversion line)
  • Total plasma unit delivered to shipyard: $15M-$30M
Sources: PyroGenesis PAWDS on USS Ford, PyroGenesis PRRS European contract, PyroGenesis Navy contract ($11.5M)

Honest uncertainty: This line item could swing $10M either direction depending on whether PyroGenesis offers a partnership/demonstration pricing deal (they want ocean plastic credibility) or whether we need to marinize from scratch.

Syngas Cleanup & Power Generation — $4M-$9M

The syngas from plastic plasma gasification needs cleaning before it can feed a reciprocating engine:

  • Gas cleanup train: Particulate filters, acid gas scrubber, cooling/condensation, activated carbon — $1.5M-$3M
  • Jenbacher gas engine (1-2 MW syngas-rated): Jenbacher J320 rated ~588 kW on syngas; we'd likely need 2x units for 1-1.2 MW total, or a single larger J420. New Jenbacher gensets run $800-$1,500/kW installed. At 1.5 MW: $1.2M-$2.25M. Used units available at significant discount.
  • Switchgear, distribution, shore connection: $0.5M-$1M
  • Diesel backup genset (500 kW): $0.3M-$0.5M (likely already on vessel, may need refurbishment)
  • Integration, controls, SCADA: $0.5M-$1.5M
Sources: Jenbacher gas engines — Clarke Energy, Jenbacher syngas generators — Gas Engine Exchange

Collection Equipment — $3M-$8M

  • Towed boom system (2x 500m booms): $1M-$2M (custom fabrication, HDPE floats, skirt netting)
  • Davits and deployment crane: $0.5M-$1M
  • Conveyor/feed system (boom to vessel, sorting, size reduction): $0.5M-$1.5M
  • Dewatering system (screw press or similar): $0.3M-$0.5M
  • Drone retrieval system (2-4 collection drones, control station): $0.5M-$2M (wide range — depends on custom vs. off-shelf)
  • Spare parts and redundancy: $0.2M-$0.5M
The Ocean Cleanup's System 03 (2,250m barrier) reportedly cost several million dollars. Our system is simpler — we're not free-drifting; we tow actively.

Source: The Ocean Cleanup — oceans technology, Elastec marine debris equipment

Helipad — $0.8M-$2M

Aluminum offshore helidecks from manufacturers like Bayards, FEC, or Helidex. Includes:

  • Helideck structure (D-value for medium helicopter, e.g. AW139)
  • Perimeter safety net
  • Lighting (TLOF, FATO, status lights)
  • Firefighting foam system
  • Structural reinforcement to vessel deck
Source: FEC Heliports — offshore, Bayards Helidecks

Accommodation Upgrade — $2M-$5M

A standard Aframax tanker accommodates ~25-30 crew, which is close to our 28-person requirement. However, the existing accommodation may be dated/worn on a 20-year-old vessel. Costs cover:

  • Cabin refurbishment or reconfiguration
  • Galley upgrade for 28-day rotations (commercial catering standard)
  • Recreation/welfare facilities (crew retention on 28-day offshore rotations demands this)
  • HVAC system refurbishment
  • Laundry, medical bay
If the existing accommodation is serviceable, this drops to the low end.

Navigation, Communications, Safety — $1.5M-$4M

  • Navigation: Radar, ECDIS, AIS, GPS, echo sounder — $0.5M-$1M (much may exist on vessel)
  • Communications: GMDSS suite, VSAT system (hardware $80K-$150K), satellite phone — $0.3M-$0.5M
  • Safety: SOLAS lifesaving appliances (lifeboats, life rafts, immersion suits), fire detection and suppression, emergency lighting — $0.5M-$1.5M
  • Environmental monitoring: Oil discharge monitoring, emissions monitoring, waste tracking — $0.2M-$0.5M

Classification & Regulatory — $1M-$2.5M

  • DNV or Lloyd's Register class approval: design review, plan approval, construction surveys
  • Flag state approval (likely Marshall Islands or similar open registry)
  • ISM/ISPS certification
  • Environmental permits (MARPOL compliance for novel waste processing)
  • IMO notification for GPGP operations
  • Estimated 12-18 months of classification society engagement throughout conversion
This is uncertain because plasma gasification on a vessel is novel — class societies may require extensive risk assessments and possibly special survey provisions.

Commissioning & Sea Trials — $1M-$2.5M

  • Harbour acceptance trials (all systems)
  • Sea trials (propulsion, stability, safety systems)
  • Plasma unit commissioning (initial fire-up, tuning, emissions testing)
  • Crew familiarization and training runs
  • Voyage from conversion yard to Honolulu (fuel + transit crew)

Project Management & Owner's Costs — $2M-$5M

  • Owner's representative / project manager: 18-30 months
  • Legal costs (contracts, permits, international maritime law)
  • Travel and subsistence during conversion oversight
  • Pre-purchase vessel surveys and inspections
  • Working capital during build period

2. OPEX — Annual Operating Costs

Summary

Line ItemLowMidHighNotes
Crew (all-in)$3.5M$4.8M$6.5M28 positions, 2x rotation, travel
Fuel (diesel)$1.5M$2.5M$4MTransit + backup generation
Plasma consumables$0.8M$1.2M$2MElectrodes, filters, refractory
Maintenance & repair$1.5M$2.5M$4MPlanned + 10-15% unplanned
Helicopter operations$0.6M$1M$1.8MMedevac retainer + ad hoc flights
Supply vessel$1.5M$2.5M$4MBi-weekly or monthly runs
Insurance$1.2M$2M$3.5MH&M, P&I, environmental
Port & harbour fees$0.2M$0.3M$0.5MHonolulu base, periodic drydock port
Shore management$0.5M$0.8M$1.2MOffice, admin, accounting, legal
Slag/waste disposal$0.1M$0.2M$0.4MInert vitrified slag — low cost
Communications (VSAT)$0.05M$0.08M$0.12MBandwidth for ops + crew welfare
Contingency (10%)$1.1M$1.8M$2.8M
TOTAL ANNUAL OPEX$12.6M$19.7M$30.8M

Line Item Detail

Crew — $3.5M-$6.5M/year

28 positions on a 28-day rotation means 56 people employed (2 crews). Estimated annual salaries (including rotation travel, benefits, training):

RoleHeadcount (per crew)Annual cost per personAnnual total
Master (Captain)1$150K-$200K$300K-$400K
Chief Officer1$100K-$140K$200K-$280K
2nd/3rd Officers2$70K-$100K$280K-$400K
Chief Engineer1$130K-$180K$260K-$360K
2nd/3rd Engineers2$80K-$120K$320K-$480K
Electrical Officer1$80K-$110K$160K-$220K
Plasma Process Operator2$90K-$130K$360K-$520K
Bosun + ABs4$50K-$70K$400K-$560K
Motormen/Oilers2$45K-$65K$180K-$260K
Cook + Steward2$40K-$55K$160K-$220K
Collection System Ops3$55K-$75K$330K-$450K
Medic/Safety Officer1$70K-$100K$140K-$200K
Drone Operator1$60K-$90K$120K-$180K
Environmental Officer1$70K-$100K$140K-$200K
Total per crew24
Both crews48$3.35M-$4.73M
Plus: rotation travel (Hawaii flights, ~$3K/person/rotation x 48 people x 13 rotations/yr = $187K), training ($100K-$200K/yr), recruitment/retention ($50K-$100K/yr).

Note: 24 per crew (not 28) is the working estimate — the 28-person accommodation allows surge capacity and visitors. Some roles may be consolidated on a lean operation.

Sources: Maritime salary guide 2026, ZipRecruiter offshore salaries, Seafarer salary calculator

Fuel — $1.5M-$4M/year

An Aframax tanker consumes ~50 tonnes/day of fuel at transit speed (14-15 knots). At the GPGP we'd be slow-steaming or station-keeping, drastically reducing consumption:

  • Transit Honolulu to GPGP (~1,000 nm, 14 knots): ~3 days each way, 6 days/round trip. At 50 t/day = 300 tonnes per round trip. With ~4 crew rotations requiring repositioning per year = 1,200 tonnes transit fuel.
  • On-station consumption: Main engine off or idling. Diesel backup genset for auxiliary loads when syngas insufficient: ~5-10 tonnes/day. Over ~280 operating days = 1,400-2,800 tonnes.
  • Total fuel: 2,600-4,000 tonnes/year of marine diesel/MGO
  • At $800-$1,000/tonne (MGO): $2.1M-$4M/year
The syngas self-generation is the key to keeping this down. If the plasma unit runs well and syngas covers most electrical load, diesel backup drops to 2-3 tonnes/day, saving $0.5M-$1M/year.

Source: Ship fuel consumption data

Plasma Consumables — $0.8M-$2M/year

  • Plasma torch electrodes: Lifespan 500-1,000 hours per electrode. At 6,000+ operating hours/year, that's 6-12 electrode replacements. Cost: $10K-$30K per replacement for small systems; potentially $50K-$100K for larger PRRS-scale torches. Annual: $300K-$600K.
  • Refractory lining: Replacement every 2-5 years, annualized: $100K-$200K
  • Gas cleanup consumables: Activated carbon, filter media, scrubber chemicals: $100K-$200K/year
  • Water treatment chemicals: $50K-$100K/year
  • Miscellaneous (sensors, gaskets, instrumentation): $50K-$100K/year
Source: Plasma gasification operating costs — Quora/industry, IntechOpen — thermal plasma gasification

Maintenance & Repair — $1.5M-$4M/year

Industry rule of thumb: annual maintenance runs 2-4% of vessel capital value for commercial ships.

  • Planned maintenance (hull, machinery, safety equipment): $0.8M-$1.5M
  • Drydocking (every 2.5-5 years, annualized): $0.5M-$1M/year (full drydock $1.5M-$5M per event)
  • Unplanned repairs allowance (10-15% of planned): $0.2M-$0.5M
  • Plasma unit maintenance (beyond consumables): $0.3M-$0.5M/year
  • Collection equipment wear & replacement: $0.2M-$0.5M/year

Helicopter Operations — $0.6M-$1.8M/year

Primary purpose: medevac capability (regulatory requirement for crew of this size, 1,000 nm offshore). Secondary: emergency personnel transfer.

  • Medevac retainer contract (Honolulu-based helicopter operator on-call): $300K-$600K/year
  • Ad hoc flights (estimated 2-4 actual medevac flights/year at $25K-$50K per flight for 1,000 nm range): $50K-$200K/year
  • Alternative: Contract with US Coast Guard (may cover medevac at no direct cost, but unreliable for 1,000 nm range). More realistic: partner with a Honolulu air ambulance service.
Note: The 1,000 nm distance to Honolulu is at the extreme range of most medium helicopters. Realistically, a medevac at that range requires a fixed-wing air ambulance (turboprop or jet) to a rendezvous point, or a staged helicopter relay. The helipad's primary value is for shorter-range transfers when closer to shore or for vessel-to-vessel transfers.

Source: Helicopter charter costs 2025, Medevac cost guide

Supply Vessel — $1.5M-$4M/year

Bi-weekly supply runs from Honolulu (1,000 nm each way, ~6-day round trip):

  • Charter rate: Platform supply vessels (PSVs) charter at $25K-$45K/day. A 6-day round trip = $150K-$270K per run.
  • Frequency: 24-26 runs/year (bi-weekly)
  • Annual charter cost: $3.6M-$7M at full PSV day rates
This is prohibitively expensive at open-market PSV rates. Cost reduction strategies:

  • Time charter a smaller, older supply vessel: $8K-$15K/day = $1.2M-$2.3M/year
  • Monthly runs instead of bi-weekly (requires more onboard storage): Cut in half
  • Coordinate with other GPGP operators (Ocean Cleanup shares logistics?)
  • Own a supply vessel (CAPEX trade-off, but amortizes cheaper than chartering)
Estimate assumes a mix: time-chartered small supply vessel at moderate frequency.

Source: Riviera — offshore vessel day rates

Insurance — $1.2M-$3.5M/year

Marine insurance for a converted vessel doing novel operations in remote waters:

  • Hull & Machinery (H&M): Typically 1-3% of insured hull value. At $60M-$100M insured value: $0.6M-$3M/year. Novel operations and remote location push premiums to the higher end.
  • Protection & Indemnity (P&I): Club entry for ~28 crew, small vessel by P&I standards: $100K-$300K/year
  • Environmental liability: Novel and hard to price. Plasma processing creates a unique risk profile. Estimate: $200K-$500K/year
  • War/piracy (if required): GPGP is low-risk area — likely minimal or waived
Source: Hull & Machinery vs P&I overview

Risk note: Insurers may initially decline or heavily load premiums for plasma waste processing at sea. This is a novel risk that has no loss history. The PAWDS systems on US Navy carriers provide some actuarial comfort, but civilian underwriting is different. Budget for the high end until a track record is established.

Port & Harbour Fees — $0.2M-$0.5M/year

  • Honolulu harbour berth (when alongside for crew change, supplies, repairs): $100K-$200K/year
  • Pilotage, towage, line handling for port entries: $50K-$100K/year
  • Drydock port fees (every 2.5-5 years, annualized): $30K-$100K/year
  • Waste reception at port (if any non-slag waste): $20K-$50K/year

Shore Management — $0.5M-$1.2M/year

  • Shore-based operations manager: $120K-$180K
  • Administrative support: $80K-$120K
  • Accounting/payroll: $60K-$100K
  • Legal retainer (maritime law, environmental compliance): $100K-$200K
  • Office lease (Honolulu): $50K-$100K
  • IT and systems: $30K-$50K
  • Regulatory compliance and reporting: $50K-$100K

Slag/Waste Disposal — $0.1M-$0.4M/year

Plasma gasification produces vitrified slag — an inert, glass-like solid. At 5-10 TPD input with ~10-20% mass remaining as slag: 0.5-2 TPD slag production = 140-560 tonnes/year.

  • Vitrified slag is classified as non-hazardous in most jurisdictions
  • Can potentially be sold as construction aggregate (revenue, not cost)
  • Port-side disposal at $50-$200/tonne if no buyer: $7K-$112K/year
  • Transport from vessel to disposal: $50K-$150K/year

Communications — $50K-$120K/year

  • VSAT service plan (10-50 Mbps): $2K-$5K/month for offshore vessel = $24K-$60K/year
  • Backup L-band (Iridium/Inmarsat): $12K-$24K/year
  • Starlink Maritime (if available at GPGP latitude): $5K/month = $60K/year (could replace VSAT)
  • Crew welfare internet allocation: included in VSAT plan
Source: SATMARIN maritime internet costs, Ship Universe 2025 Wi-Fi


3. Revenue Projections

3a. Plastic Credit Revenue Matrix

Plastic credits currently trade at $140-$670/tonne for standard waste management credits (World Bank data). Ocean plastic credits command a significant premium because:

  • Ocean plastic is harder and more expensive to collect than land-based waste
  • The environmental impact narrative is stronger
  • Supply is scarce (very few organizations can credibly remove ocean plastic)
  • Corporate ESG demand outstrips supply
Comparable pricing: The Ocean Cleanup reportedly receives $1,000-$5,000+ per tonne equivalent through their corporate partnerships and sunglasses/product programs.

Revenue matrix — Annual plastic credit income by price x throughput:

Throughput (TPD)Operating DaysAnnual Tonnes$500/t$1,000/t$2,500/t$5,000/t
3280840$0.42M$0.84M$2.1M$4.2M
52801,400$0.70M$1.4M$3.5M$7.0M
72801,960$0.98M$1.96M$4.9M$9.8M
102802,800$1.4M$2.8M$7.0M$14.0M
53201,600$0.80M$1.6M$4.0M$8.0M
73202,240$1.12M$2.24M$5.6M$11.2M
103203,200$1.6M$3.2M$8.0M$16.0M
Operating days assumption: 280 days = conservative (allows for transit, weather, maintenance, port calls). 320 days = optimistic but achievable for a well-run operation.

Source: World Bank — plastic credits overview, Plastic credit market growth

3b. Carbon Credit Potential

Plastic that would otherwise persist in the ocean for centuries is being permanently destroyed. The carbon accounting is complex:

  • Avoided emissions: Plastic degrading in the ocean releases greenhouse gases (methane, ethylene). Preventing this has a carbon value, though quantification methodologies are immature.
  • Process emissions: Plasma gasification releases CO2 from the carbon in plastic. This is a negative for carbon credits.
  • Net carbon position: Likely slightly negative or neutral. The primary credit value is plastic removal, not carbon.
  • Potential: $0-$5/tonne CO2 equivalent, negligible compared to plastic credit value.
Honest assessment: Carbon credits are not a significant revenue driver for this project. Plastic credits are the play.

3c. Corporate Sponsorship

Ocean plastic cleanup is a high-visibility ESG activity. Comparable project sponsorship data:

ProjectReported Corporate SponsorsEstimated Annual Sponsorship
The Ocean CleanupCoca-Cola, Maersk, Salesforce, Samsung, others$10M-$30M+ (estimated from total $100M+ raised)
The Manta / SeaCleaners72 corporate partners$2M-$5M/year (from €25M raised over ~5 years)
Plastic OdysseyL'Occitane, Veolia, others$1M-$3M/year (estimated)
The Claw sponsorship estimate:

TierDescriptionPrice RangeTarget CountAnnual Total
Founding PartnerName on hull, major visibility$1M-$5M/year1-2$1M-$10M
Major SponsorLogo on vessel, content rights$250K-$1M/year3-5$0.75M-$5M
Supporting SponsorWebsite, reports, events$50K-$250K/year5-10$0.25M-$2.5M
Total sponsorship range$2M-$17.5M
A realistic Year 1 target (with limited track record): $1M-$3M. After demonstrating operations and generating media coverage: $3M-$10M by Year 3.

3d. Total Revenue Scenarios

ScenarioPlastic CreditsSponsorshipOtherTotal Annual
Conservative$1.4M (5 TPD, $1,000/t)$1M$0.1M$2.5M
Base case$5M (7 TPD, $2,500/t)$3M$0.3M$8.3M
Optimistic$14M (10 TPD, $5,000/t)$8M$0.5M$22.5M

4. Break-Even Analysis

4a. OPEX Break-Even

Question: At what credit price x throughput does annual revenue cover annual operating costs?

Using mid-case OPEX of $19.7M/year:

ThroughputCredit price needed (credits only)Credit price needed (with $3M sponsorship)
3 TPD (840 t/yr)$23,452/t — unrealistic$19,881/t — unrealistic
5 TPD (1,400 t/yr)$14,071/t — unrealistic$11,929/t — unrealistic
7 TPD (1,960 t/yr)$10,051/t — very high$8,520/t — very high
10 TPD (2,800 t/yr)$7,036/t — high$5,964/t — high
With $8M sponsorship (base case):

ThroughputCredit price neededFeasible?
5 TPD (1,400 t/yr)$8,357/tStretch — requires premium pricing
7 TPD (1,960 t/yr)$5,969/tPossible at top of market
10 TPD (2,800 t/yr)$4,179/tAchievable with strong brand
Using low-case OPEX of $12.6M/year with $3M sponsorship:

ThroughputCredit price neededFeasible?
5 TPD (1,400 t/yr)$6,857/tHigh but within reach
7 TPD (1,960 t/yr)$4,898/tAchievable
10 TPD (2,800 t/yr)$3,429/tRealistic
Key finding: OPEX break-even requires EITHER aggressive sponsorship revenue ($5M+) AND premium credit pricing ($3,000+/t), OR throughput at the high end (10 TPD) with moderate credit pricing. At 5 TPD and $1,000/t credits, this project does not cover its operating costs from credits alone — it needs substantial sponsorship, grants, or other funding.

4b. CAPEX Payback

Using mid-case CAPEX of $111M and assuming OPEX break-even is achieved:

Annual surplus above OPEXPayback period
$1M111 years — not viable
$3M37 years — not viable
$5M22 years — marginal
$10M11 years — possible
$15M7.4 years — good
$20M5.5 years — excellent
The optimistic scenario ($22.5M revenue, $19.7M OPEX = $2.8M surplus) yields a 40-year payback. This project does not have a traditional investment return profile.

CAPEX payback is not the right frame. Like The Ocean Cleanup, this is a mission-funded project. CAPEX should be viewed as donated/granted capital, not invested capital expecting return. The question is not "when do investors get their money back" but "can the operation sustain itself once built?"

4c. Sensitivity Analysis — What Moves the Needle Most?

VariableImpact on annual P&LControllability
Plastic credit price$1,400/yr per $1/tonne at 5 TPDLow — market driven, but brand/certification helps
Throughput (TPD)$700K-$1.4M per additional TPD at $2,500/tMedium — depends on collection efficiency + plasma uptime
Sponsorship$1M-$10M swingMedium — depends on visibility, story, credibility
Crew cost$3.5M-$6.5M rangeMedium — flag state, nationality, role consolidation
Supply vessel$1.5M-$4M rangeHigh — logistics strategy is a big lever
Fuel$1.5M-$4M rangeMedium — syngas self-generation offsets diesel
Insurance$1.2M-$3.5M rangeLow initially — improves with track record
The three biggest levers: 1. Credit pricing — Getting certified as a premium ocean plastic credit (Verra, Gold Standard) at $2,500-$5,000/t vs. generic $500/t makes or breaks the economics 2. Sponsorship — $8M+ in sponsorship transforms the P&L from chronic deficit to viable 3. Logistics optimization — Supply vessel costs can be halved with smart scheduling, own vessel, or partnership


5. Comparable Project Costs

5a. The Ocean Cleanup

MetricValueSource
Total raised (lifetime)$100M+ (estimated)Multiple rounds including $25M Gebbia donation
Largest single donation$25M (Joe Gebbia, 2023)CBS News
Total plastic removed16M+ kg (all systems, as of Aug 2024)Ocean Cleanup
Cost to clean entire GPGP$7.5B (10yr) or $4B (5yr)Ocean Cleanup press release
Implied cost per tonne (historical)~$6,000-$8,000/t (rough: $100M spent / ~16,000t collected)Estimate — not officially reported
System 03 costNot publicly disclosed; estimated several million $Media reports
Revenue modelCorporate partnerships, "sunglasses from ocean plastic" products, credits
Key takeaway: Even the most successful ocean cleanup project operates at $6,000-$8,000/t all-in cost, far above any credit market price. It survives on donations and corporate partnerships.

5b. The Manta (SeaCleaners / Yvan Bourgnon)

MetricValueSource
Vessel type56m purpose-built sailing catamaran
Build cost (initial estimate)€30-35M (~$33-38M)SeaCleaners reporting
Build cost (updated 2023)€42M (~$46M)Le Journal des Entreprises
Total raised (as of 2023)€25M (~$27M)
Amount spent on studies€7M (~$7.7M)
Collection target5,000-10,000 tonnes/year
Corporate sponsors72 companies (50% French)
Individual donors10,000+
Public subsidiesNone
StatusUnder construction (as of latest reports)
Key takeaway: A purpose-built 56m catamaran costs ~$46M — less than our low-case CAPEX. But it has no plasma processing (just collection and basic pyrolysis), is much smaller, and has lower throughput. The Claw's plasma capability is the premium.

5c. Plastic Odyssey

MetricValueSource
Vessel typeConverted 40m former research vesselPlastic Odyssey
Build/conversion costNot publicly disclosed; estimated $2-5MEstimate based on vessel age/size
Sponsor partnersL'Occitane, VeoliaVeolia partnership
FocusDemonstration, education, coastal recycling — not open ocean cleanup
ThroughputSmall-scale (demonstration, not industrial)
Key takeaway: Much smaller scale, different mission (education and coastal, not open-ocean processing). Not directly comparable but shows that converted vessels can work.

5d. FPSO Conversions (Oil & Gas Benchmarks)

MetricValueSource
Full FPSO conversion (tanker to production)$200M-$500M+Plant FCE
New-build FPSO$1B-$3BIndustry reports
Conversion timeline18-30 months
Market trend (2024-25)80% new-builds, shifting away from conversionsOffshore Engineer
Key takeaway: Our conversion is much simpler than an FPSO (one process unit vs. full oil processing topsides). $68M-$173M CAPEX range is consistent with a "light" FPSO-style conversion, which makes sense.

5e. PyroGenesis PAWDS (Naval Reference)

MetricValueSource
PAWDS unit cost (estimated)~$5M each (marinized, military spec)PyroGenesis investor presentation
2-ship contract (Enterprise + Doris Miller)$11.5MPyroGenesis IR
Capacity~400 lb/hr (~4.4 TPD)
Installed onUSS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78), USS John F. Kennedy (CVN-79)PyroGenesis press release
After-sales contract$1M purchase order (spare parts, support)
Key takeaway: PAWDS proves plasma waste processing works at sea. At ~$5M per unit and 4.4 TPD capacity, a PRRS system scaled to 5-10 TPD with civilian marinization could reasonably fall in our $15-30M range.


6. Funding Gap Analysis

6a. CAPEX Before First Tonne

Every dollar of CAPEX must be in place before a single tonne is processed. There is no "start small and grow" path with a vessel conversion — you either have the ship or you don't.

PhaseCostCumulative
Feasibility study & preliminary design$0.5M-$1M$0.5M-$1M
Detailed engineering & class approval$2M-$4M$2.5M-$5M
Hull purchase$12M-$25M$14.5M-$30M
Shipyard conversion + all equipment$40M-$80M$54.5M-$110M
Commissioning & trials$1M-$2.5M$55.5M-$112.5M
First tonne capability$56M-$113M
Working capital for first 6 months of operations (before any revenue): $6M-$10M.

Total funding needed to reach revenue: $62M-$123M

6b. Years to OPEX Break-Even

Assuming operations begin in Year 1:

ScenarioAnnual RevenueAnnual OPEXSurplus/(Deficit)OPEX Break-Even?
Conservative$2.5M$12.6M($10.1M)Never
Moderate$8.3M$15M($6.7M)Never without growth
Base case$12M$17M($5M)Year 3-4 if revenue grows
Optimistic$22.5M$19.7M$2.8MYear 1
Realistic trajectory: Revenue starts low in Year 1 (proving concept, building credibility) and grows as credit certification, sponsorship, and operational efficiency improve:

YearEst. RevenueEst. OPEXSurplus/(Deficit)Cumulative Deficit
1$3M$15M($12M)($12M)
2$7M$16M($9M)($21M)
3$12M$17M($5M)($26M)
4$16M$18M($2M)($28M)
5$20M$19M$1M($27M)
OPEX break-even: Year 5 under a growth trajectory. Cumulative operating deficit through break-even: ~$27M.

6c. Total Funding Through Break-Even

ComponentLowMidHigh
CAPEX (vessel ready to operate)$62M$95M$130M
Cumulative OPEX deficit (Years 1-5)$15M$27M$45M
Total funding needed$77M$122M$175M

6d. Comparison to Historical Ocean Cleanup Fundraising

ProjectTotal RaisedTimelineHow
The Ocean Cleanup$100M+12 years (2013-2025)Crowdfunding, corporate, philanthropy
The Manta (SeaCleaners)€25M ($27M)~6 yearsCorporate sponsors, individual donors
Plastic Odyssey~$5-10M (est.)~5 yearsCorporate sponsors
The Claw (needed)$77M-$175M5-7 yearsTBD
Reality check: The Claw needs more capital than any comparable project except The Ocean Cleanup. It needs more than The Manta's entire build budget just for the plasma unit. This is achievable but requires:

1. A phased fundraising strategy — don't ask for $120M on day one 2. A proof-of-concept milestone — land-based plasma test on ocean plastic to prove the tech works 3. Institutional funding — this is too large for crowdfunding alone. Need foundations, government grants, or climate-focused venture philanthropy 4. Strategic corporate partners — companies that need plastic offset credits AND want the PR (Coca-Cola, Nestle, Unilever, PepsiCo — the world's largest plastic producers)


7. Key Risks and Honest Unknowns

RiskSeverityMitigation
Plasma unit cost overrunHighLock price with PyroGenesis early; consider phased contract
Shipyard conversion delaysHighFixed-price contract with penalties; experienced yard
Plastic credit market doesn't mature to $2,500+/tHighDiversify revenue (sponsorship, grants); be first mover
Insurance refusal or extreme premiumMediumEngage insurers during design phase; build from PAWDS track record
Collection throughput below targetMediumConservative base case; multiple collection methods
Classification society rejects novel designMediumEngage DNV/LR from day one; precedent from PAWDS naval approval
Syngas quality insufficient for engineLow-MediumGas cleanup system sized with margin; diesel backup always available
Crew retention on remote 28-day rotationsMediumCompetitive pay, good accommodation, crew welfare investment
Environmental opposition to at-sea incinerationMediumEmissions data, transparency, environmental monitoring

Methodology Notes

  • All figures in 2026 USD unless otherwise noted
  • "Low" estimates assume favorable conditions: cheap hull, Asian shipyard, partnership pricing on plasma unit, lean operations
  • "High" estimates assume unfavorable conditions: elevated market, European shipyard, full commercial pricing, regulatory friction
  • "Mid" estimates are not simply averages — they represent the most likely outcome based on available evidence
  • Fuel prices assumed at $800-$1,000/tonne for marine gasoil (MGO), which is volatile
  • Crew costs based on international (mixed nationality) crewing, not all-Western wages
  • Operating days assumed at 280 (conservative) — allows 85 days for transit, weather, maintenance, port calls

Sources Index

Vessel Market

FPSO & Conversion

Plasma Technology

Crew & Operations

Supply & Logistics

Revenue & Credits

Comparable Projects

Insurance & Classification

Economics & Funding — The Financial Picture

Cost to Clean the GPGP

The Ocean Cleanup published the first-ever cost + timeline estimate (September 2024):

ScenarioTimelineCost
Standard operations10 years$7.5 billion
Accelerated operations5 years$4 billion

Context for $7.5 Billion

  • Less than 0.01% of global annual GDP
  • Governments spend 25x more yearly on fossil fuel subsidies
  • 1% of annual net profits of the world's plastic producers = $7.2 billion
  • The US spends ~$10 billion on Halloween candy and costumes annually
  • A single aircraft carrier costs ~$13 billion

Progress So Far

  • Ocean Cleanup has removed 50+ million kg total (as of Jan 2026)
  • 2025 alone: 25 million kg (record year)
  • This represents ~0.5% of total GPGP mass — proving feasibility, not yet at scale
  • System 03 (deployed May 2023): 2,250m barrier, 5x capacity of previous system

Crowdfunding Precedent

The Ocean Cleanup's Campaign

  • Platform: Indiegogo (not Kickstarter)
  • Goal: $2 million in 100 days
  • Result: $2,154,282 raised in 98 days
  • Backers: 38,000+ funders from 160 countries
  • Purpose: Fund a 530-page feasibility study (authored by 70 scientists/engineers)
  • Status at time: Boyan Slat was 19 years old
  • Called "most successful non-profit crowdfunding campaign in history"

Crowdfunding Platform Comparison

PlatformModelBest ForKey Feature
IndiegogoFlexible or fixed fundingEnvironmental/research projectsKeep funds even if goal not met
KickstarterAll-or-nothingTangible product deliverablesMust fit a category (Technology)
GoFundMeDonation-based, keep allCause-based fundraisingNo deliverable required
StartSomeGoodImpact-focusedSocial/environmental missionsMentorship + coaching included
Zeffy100% free for nonprofitsNonprofit fundraisingZero fees, 10K+ nonprofits use it

Recommendation for The Claw

  • Primary: Indiegogo (precedent set by Ocean Cleanup, flexible funding)
  • Parallel: GoFundMe for pure donations
  • Phase 1 goal: Fund feasibility study + build the platform/hub
  • Reward tiers: founding supporter status, name on platform, early research access, progress updates

Oil Rig Cost Comparison (Scale Reference)

The Claw concept is "essentially equivalent to one oil rig." For context:

  • NOT YET RESEARCHED — need specific data on:
- [ ] Small/medium offshore platform construction costs - [ ] Floating production storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel costs - [ ] Timeline from design to deployment - [ ] Crew requirements and operational costs - [ ] Maintenance schedules and costs


Potential Revenue Streams (Long-term)

  • Carbon credits from plastic removal / processing (carbon market potential)
  • Recycled material sales (processed plastic → construction aggregate, fuel)
  • Syngas energy from plasma gasification (power generation)
  • Research partnerships (universities pay to study at the platform)
  • Corporate sponsorship (environmental redemption branding)
  • Government grants (environmental cleanup, international waters)
  • Documentary / media rights (the story is compelling)

Government Funding Sources to Research

  • [ ] NOAA grants for ocean cleanup
  • [ ] EPA environmental remediation funding
  • [ ] NSF (National Science Foundation) research grants
  • [ ] DOE (Department of Energy) — waste-to-energy technology
  • [ ] International maritime organization funding
  • [ ] Japanese government Pacific cleanup initiatives
  • [ ] EU Horizon Europe environmental programs

Hydrogen Economics at Sea — Can The Claw Monetize Hydrogen?

Research Date: 2026-03-03 Status: Deep dive — revenue modeling for hydrogen, diesel, and credit pathways Relevance: Directly impacts station economics, investor pitch, and technology selection


1. Hydrogen from Plastic Gasification — Yield Data

The InEnTec Columbia Ridge Benchmark

The single most relevant real-world data point is InEnTec's Columbia Ridge facility in Arlington, Oregon — an $8M hydrogen plant that achieved mechanical completion in October 2025 and began commissioning immediately after.

MetricValueSource
Feedstock capacity25 TPD (tonnes per day)InEnTec press release, Oct 2025
Hydrogen output1,500 kg H2/dayInEnTec / MIT News
H2 yield60 kg H2 per tonne of feedstockCalculated: 1,500 / 25
Feedstock typesMSW, hazardous waste, plastics, textiles, e-wasteInEnTec technology page
Conversion~100% organic-to-syngasInEnTec claim
Expansion plans"More than doubling output" in coming yearsInEnTec, Oct 2025
Critical nuance: The 60 kg/tonne yield is from mixed municipal waste. Ocean plastic (87-96% polyethylene) has a far richer hydrogen feedstock. PE is 14.3% hydrogen by mass (C2H4 monomer), versus mixed MSW which is perhaps 5-8%. With steam reforming of the syngas, yields from pure polyethylene feedstock should be higher — potentially 80-120 kg H2/tonne.

Academic Yield Data by Plastic Type

Plastic TypeProcessH2 YieldSource
LDPEPyrolysis + catalytic steam reforming (900°C)68 mmol/g = ~137 kg/tonneEnergy & Fuels, 2023
LDPEPyrolysis + reforming (1000°C)133 mmol/g = ~268 kg/tonneEnergy & Fuels, 2023
HDPE, PP, PSPyrolysis + reforming (900°C)~62 mmol/g = ~125 kg/tonneEnergy & Fuels, 2023
Mixed polyolefinsPyrolysis + oxidative reforming25 wt% of feedstock = 250 kg/tonneScienceDirect review
Mixed polyolefins + PSPyrolysis + reforming~25 wt%Multiple academic studies
PETPyrolysis + reforming~8 wt% = 80 kg/tonne(Oxygen-rich polymer, lower yield)
50:50 biomass + HDPEPyrolysis + reforming~15 wt% = 150 kg/tonneCo-gasification study
Bottom line for The Claw: With GPGP feedstock being 87-96% PE/PP, the theoretical maximum is ~250 kg H2 per tonne. Practical plasma gasification with water-gas shift will achieve less — a realistic working estimate is 60-120 kg H2 per tonne of dry ocean plastic, depending on process optimization and whether full steam reforming is implemented downstream of the gasifier.

Syngas Composition from Plastic Gasification

ComponentPlasma (CO2 environment)Steam gasification (>850°C)Chemical looping (HDPE)Source
H224.6 vol%60-65 vol%75.6 vol%Various academic
CO55.8 vol%15-25 vol%8.6 vol%Various academic
CO28-28 vol%5-10 vol%Depends on O-content of polymer
CH42-8 vol%5-10 vol%Various
H2+CO total~80 vol%~80 vol%~84 vol%Consistent across studies
The Claw's syngas (from energy-balance.md): H2 at 43.86 vol%, CO at 30.93 vol%, LHV of 13.88 MJ/Nm3. This is hydrogen-rich syngas, suitable for both power generation and hydrogen extraction.

Energy Balance — Net Surplus

From the existing energy balance analysis (energy-balance.md), the numbers are clear:

ScenarioScaleDaily GenerationDaily ConsumptionNet Surplus
Prototype5 TPD13,800 kWh8,200 kWh+5,600 kWh
Full scale100 TPD275,700 kWh67,700 kWh+208,000 kWh
Pessimistic (35% ocean penalty)100 TPD179,200 kWh67,700 kWh+111,500 kWh
The station generates 2-4x more energy than it consumes. The question is not whether there is surplus — it is what to do with it.


2. Green Hydrogen Market (2025-2030)

Current Prices (as of early 2026)

RegionPrice ($/kg H2)Source
US Gulf Coast (alkaline)$2.30IMARC Group, Jan 2025
US Gulf Coast (PEM electrolysis)$3.19IMARC Group, Jan 2025
Europe$7.96IMARC Green H2 Index, 2025
Grey hydrogen (SMR, global)$1.00-$3.00Multiple sources
Green hydrogen (global range)$4.00-$12.00Coherent Market Insights

Price Targets for 2030

TargetWhoSource
$1.00/kgUS DOE Hydrogen Shot InitiativeDOE, 2021 target
$1.00/kgUS DOE net-zero pathwayDOE, by 2031
$1.80/kgChile (Atacama solar)PwC analysis
EUR 1.00-1.50/kgMiddle East, Africa, US, Australia, ChinaPwC, by 2050
~50% reduction from 2025Global consensusMultiple forecasts

Market Size

The green hydrogen market is valued at approximately $17.28 billion in 2026 and projected to reach $231.32 billion by 2035 (Precedence Research). Growth rate: CAGR of 68.1% through 2030 (Technavio).

Major Buyers

SectorH2 Demand DriverScale
Ammonia/fertilizerExisting: 190 Mt NH3/yr globallyMassive, proven demand
Oil refiningHydrocracking, desulfurization~33% of current H2 use
SteelDirect reduced iron (DRI) replacing blast furnacesGrowing fast (ArcelorMittal, SSAB)
Shipping fuelIMO 2050 net-zero target; ammonia as marine fuelEmerging, enormous potential
Heavy transportFuel cell trucks (Nikola, Hyzon)Growing but uncertain
Power storageGrid balancing, seasonal storageLong-term play

Government Subsidies and Incentives

United States — IRA Section 45V Clean Hydrogen Production Tax Credit:

TierLifecycle CO2e (kg per kg H2)Credit ($/kg H2)
1 (cleanest)< 0.45$3.00
20.45 - 1.5$1.04
31.5 - 2.5$0.78
42.5 - 4.0$0.62
Key 45V issue for The Claw: Waste gasification is NOT a standard GREET pathway. The Claw would need to apply for a Provisional Emissions Rate (PER) — an individualized lifecycle assessment. Given the feedstock is ocean waste plastic (which would otherwise photodegrade into methane/ethylene), the lifecycle case is strong, but the bureaucratic pathway is uncertain.

European Union — Green Deal & Hydrogen Bank:

  • Target: 10 Mt renewable H2 production + 10 Mt imports by 2030
  • European Hydrogen Bank: auction-based subsidies, second round (March 2025) drew EUR 4.8B in bids against EUR 1.2B budget
  • France: up to EUR 4/kg CfD premium, guaranteed for 15 years
  • Industrial mandates: 42% of industrial H2 must be renewable by 2030, 60% by 2035

Waste-to-Hydrogen vs. Electrolysis on Cost

PathwayProduction Cost ($/kg H2)Energy SourceNotes
Steam methane reforming (grey)$1.00-$2.00Natural gasCheapest, high emissions
Electrolysis (green)$4.00-$7.00Renewable electricityFalling fast with solar/wind costs
Waste gasification (InEnTec)$2.00-$4.00 (est.)Waste feedstock energyUses "half the energy of electrolysis" (InEnTec claim)
The Claw (ocean plastic)$3.00-$6.00 (est.)Ocean plastic syngasHigher due to ocean ops, but feedstock is free
InEnTec claims their process uses half the energy of electrolysis for hydrogen production, with plans to reach one-quarter. This is because the hydrogen atoms are already present in the plastic polymer chains — you are liberating them, not splitting water.


3. Hydrogen Storage at Sea

Option Comparison for a Remote Ocean Platform

MethodH2 Density (kg H2/m3)ConditionsEnergy PenaltyFeasibility at Sea
Compressed gas (350 bar)23High-pressure tanks10-12% of H2 energyMost feasible — simplest, proven on ships
Compressed gas (700 bar)40Very high-pressure tanks12-15% of H2 energyFeasible but higher equipment cost
Liquid hydrogen71Cryogenic, -253°C25-35% of H2 energyVery difficult — liquefaction plant is complex offshore
Ammonia (liquid)121-33°C or 10 bar at ambient15-30% (incl. Haber-Bosch)Attractive density, difficult process
LOHC (DBT)54Ambient T&P25-35% (dehydrogenation)Promising — safe, ambient storage
Metal hydrides40-80Ambient-ish, heavy5-10%Too heavy for floating platform

Compressed Hydrogen (350/700 bar)

Pros: Proven technology, standard industrial equipment, no chemical conversion needed, fast loading/unloading. Cons: Low volumetric density means large tank farms. 350-bar tanks at 23 kg H2/m3 means storing 1,500 kg/day of production (InEnTec equivalent) would require ~65 m3 of tank volume per day, or ~455 m3 for one week of buffer storage. Safety: Hydrogen embrittlement is the main concern for steel vessels in marine salt air. Composite tanks (Type IV) preferred. Weight: Manageable on a platform-scale structure.

Liquid Hydrogen (-253°C)

Pros: 3x the density of compressed gas. Cons: Liquefaction consumes 25-35% of the hydrogen's energy content. The liquefaction plant requires cryogenic compressors, heat exchangers, and vacuum-insulated piping — all of which add enormous complexity to an offshore platform. Boil-off losses of 0.2-0.5% per day in transit. Verdict: Not recommended for The Claw. The complexity penalty is too high for a remote ocean platform. Only Kawasaki's Suiso Frontier (1,250 m3 prototype) has demonstrated liquid H2 marine transport, and even their commercial-scale 160,000 m3 carrier is years away.

Ammonia Conversion (Haber-Bosch at Sea)

The case for ammonia: Liquid ammonia achieves 121 kg H2/m3 — the highest density of any option. Ammonia is already traded globally (190 Mt/year), with an enormous existing tanker fleet. It can be stored at -33°C at atmospheric pressure, or at ~10 bar at ambient temperature.

The case against ammonia at sea: The Haber-Bosch process requires:

  • High temperature (400-500°C) and pressure (150-300 bar)
  • Iron catalyst
  • A source of nitrogen (air separation unit)
  • Electricity consumption: 8.7-10.3 kWh per kg NH3
This is a full chemical plant. Doing this offshore, in an aggressive marine environment, is technically possible but adds enormous capital cost and operational complexity. One academic study noted: "ammonia and LOHC offshore facilities are not recommended due to the complexity and extra costs derived from the construction and O&M."

Small-scale modular Haber-Bosch is under active development (e.g., absorption-enhanced reactors at lower pressures), but none are commercially proven at the scale The Claw would need (converting 1,500+ kg H2/day to ~8,500 kg NH3/day).

Verdict: Ammonia is the best storage/transport medium IF The Claw has the capital to install synthesis equipment. It transforms the hydrogen monetization problem into a commodity logistics problem. But this is a Phase 2-3 upgrade, not a starting configuration.

LOHC (Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carriers)

How it works: Hydrogen is chemically bonded to an organic liquid (typically dibenzyltoluene / DBT) via catalytic hydrogenation. The loaded LOHC is a stable liquid at ambient temperature and pressure — it can be stored in ordinary tanks and shipped in standard chemical tankers. At the destination, hydrogen is released via catalytic dehydrogenation.

Pros: Ambient storage, uses existing fuel infrastructure for transport, inherently safe (no pressurization, no cryogenics, not explosive). Cons: Energy penalty of 25-35% for the hydrogenation/dehydrogenation cycle. LOHC must be returned to the platform for reuse (round-trip logistics). Technology still at pilot scale — Hydrogenious LOHC Technologies targeting 1,800 t H2/yr hub by 2028.

Verdict: Most operationally practical option for a remote platform. Safe, ambient, and compatible with standard tanker logistics. But the 25-35% energy penalty and pilot-scale maturity are concerns.

Recommendation for The Claw

Phase 1 (Prototype, 5 TPD): Compressed hydrogen at 350 bar. Simple, proven, sufficient for small volumes. Use hydrogen on-platform for power generation via fuel cells.

Phase 2 (Scaled, 25-50 TPD): Evaluate LOHC or compressed hydrogen export via scheduled tanker pickup. The choice depends on whether LOHC technology has matured by then.

Phase 3 (Full scale, 100 TPD): If hydrogen export is the revenue model, install ammonia synthesis for maximum transport efficiency. This is the point where The Claw would generate enough hydrogen (6,000-12,000 kg/day) to justify the capital cost of a Haber-Bosch unit.


4. Hydrogen Transport from the GPGP

Distance to Market

DestinationDistance from GPGP center (~32°N, 145°W)Market
Honolulu, HI~1,000-1,100 nautical milesMilitary bases, tourism, refining
Los Angeles/Long Beach~1,400-1,600 nmLargest H2 market on US West Coast
San Francisco~1,200-1,400 nmCalifornia clean energy mandates
Tokyo/Yokohama~2,500-3,000 nmJapan's massive H2 import program
Honolulu is the nearest major port. A medium-speed cargo vessel at 12 knots covers 1,100 nm in approximately 3.8 days each way — meaning a round trip of ~8 days including loading/unloading.

Tanker Options

Liquid hydrogen tankers: Essentially non-existent commercially. Only the Kawasaki Suiso Frontier exists (1,250 m3, carrying 87.5 tonnes of H2). The 160,000 m3 commercial carrier (10,000 tonnes H2 capacity) has approval-in-principle but is not yet built.

Compressed hydrogen carriers: No purpose-built fleet exists. Container-based tube trailers on cargo vessels are possible but inefficient.

Ammonia tankers: Large, mature fleet. Maersk has ordered 93,000 m3 ammonia carriers for 2026 delivery. Thousands of ammonia-carrying vessels already operate globally. This is the only mature maritime hydrogen transport pathway.

Cost per kg Delivered vs. Produced

Transport MethodDistanceCost Added ($/kg H2)Source
Ammonia tanker (incl. conversion + reconversion)<1,000 km$1.00-$1.50IEA / Hydrogen Insight
Ammonia tanker1,000-5,000 km$1.50-$2.00DiviGas analysis
Ammonia tanker>5,000 km$2.00-$2.50Multiple studies
Ammonia (no reconversion, sold as NH3)up to 8,000 km~$1.00Hydrogen Insight
Liquid H2 tankerAny$1.90-$2.20IEA estimate
LOHCVariable$1.50-$2.50IEA / Topsoe
For The Claw to Honolulu (~2,000 km): Estimated transport cost of $1.50-$2.00/kg H2 via ammonia conversion and tanker. If sold as ammonia directly (to Honolulu port for marine fuel bunkering), transport cost drops to $0.80-$1.20/kg H2 equivalent.

Pickup Frequency

At 100 TPD processing and an estimated 80 kg H2/tonne yield:

  • Daily H2 production: 8,000 kg/day
  • Weekly: 56,000 kg = 56 tonnes
  • Monthly: ~240 tonnes
As ammonia (17.6% H2 by mass): 240 tonnes H2/month = ~1,364 tonnes NH3/month.

A small ammonia tanker (5,000 m3 / ~3,400 tonnes NH3 capacity) would need to visit approximately every 2.5 months at full-scale 100 TPD operation. At 25 TPD (InEnTec scale): every 10 months — likely bundled with supply runs.


5. Alternative: Use Hydrogen On-Platform

The Self-Sufficiency Case

Rather than exporting hydrogen, The Claw could consume it all on-platform for power generation, eliminating dependence on external fuel supply entirely.

Fuel cell option:

  • PEM fuel cells: 50-60% electrical efficiency
  • SOFC (solid oxide fuel cells): 55-65% electrical efficiency
  • SOFC + gas turbine hybrid: 65-70% efficiency
Gas turbine option:
  • Simple cycle on syngas/H2: 30-40% efficiency
  • Combined cycle: 45-55% efficiency

Self-Sufficiency Calculation (100 TPD scenario)

From energy-balance.md, the station generates a net surplus of +208,000 kWh/day at 100 TPD (or +111,500 kWh/day pessimistic).

If we divert ALL syngas to hydrogen production instead of direct power:

  • H2 production: 8,000 kg/day
  • H2 energy content: 8,000 kg × 33.3 kWh/kg = 266,400 kWh/day
  • Through fuel cells at 60% efficiency: 159,840 kWh/day
  • Station consumption: ~67,700 kWh/day
  • Surplus after self-power: ~92,140 kWh/day
This surplus is equivalent to ~2,768 kg H2/day that could be exported — roughly 35% of total production.

The Decision Matrix

StrategyRevenueComplexityRisk
Sell all H2Highest potentialRequires storage + tanker logisticsMarket price volatility; transport cost
Use all H2 on-platformZero H2 revenue, but zero fuel costsSimplest — no export infrastructureNo external revenue stream
Hybrid (use 65%, sell 35%)ModerateModerateBalanced — self-powered with revenue
Use H2 + sell creditsModerate-highLow-moderateDepends on credit market maturity

The Credit Comparison

ApproachAnnual Revenue (100 TPD)Notes
Sell all H2 at $5/kg8,000 kg × 365 × $5 = $14.6M/yrRequires full export infrastructure
Sell 35% surplus H22,768 kg × 365 × $5 = $5.1M/yrPlatform is self-powered
Plastic credits at $500/tonne100 × 365 × $500 = $18.25M/yrIf credits achievable (see Section 7)
H2 ($5.1M) + credits ($18.25M)$23.35M/yrCombined approach

6. The "Blue Diesel" Alternative

The WPI/WHOI/Harvard Study (PNAS, November 2021)

"Thermodynamic feasibility of shipboard conversion of marine plastics to blue diesel for self-powered ocean cleanup" — Belden, Kazantzis, Reddy et al.

The concept: Use hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) instead of plasma gasification to convert ocean plastic into liquid fuel ("blue diesel") at 300-550°C and 250-300 bar. The term "blue diesel" references marine origin, contrasting with petroleum diesel and land-based "green diesel."

Key findings from the paper:

MetricValueNotes
Process temperature300-550°CSupercritical water regime
Process pressure250-300 barHigh but proven in industry
Oil yield (PP/PE mix)85 wt%At modest 400°C, no catalyst needed
Oil yield (polystyrene)86 wt%Highest yield of any common plastic
Oil yield (PET)16 wt%Lowest — oxygen-rich polymer
Oil yield (general plastic)>90 wt%In absence of catalysts
Solid byproduct<5 wt%Much less than pyrolysis
Oil HHV (from PP/PS)44-45 MJ/kgComparable to gasoline (43.4 MJ/kg)
Self-powered?YESMonte Carlo exergy analysis confirms feasibility
Scenarios modeled: 230 to 11,500 tonnes of plastic removed yearly from the GPGP. The thermodynamic analysis demonstrated sufficient energy to power both the conversion process AND the cleanup vessel.

Could The Claw Produce Marine Diesel Instead of Hydrogen?

Yes, technically. HTL of mixed PE/PP ocean plastic yields 85%+ oil by weight. At 100 TPD:

  • Oil production: ~85 tonnes/day = ~100,000 liters/day
  • Annual: ~36.5 million liters of blue diesel
Advantages over hydrogen:
  • Liquid fuel at ambient conditions — trivially stored in standard tank farms
  • Existing marine fuel distribution infrastructure
  • No conversion losses (no Haber-Bosch, no dehydrogenation)
  • Can be used directly in diesel generators for station power
  • Marine diesel market is proven, enormous, and immediate
Disadvantages vs. hydrogen:
  • Still a fossil-equivalent fuel — burning it releases CO2
  • Lower value per tonne than hydrogen in a decarbonizing economy
  • No eligibility for green hydrogen subsidies (IRA 45V, EU Hydrogen Bank)
  • Regulatory headwinds: IMO 2050 net-zero means diesel demand may peak and decline

Economics Comparison: Diesel vs. Hydrogen

MetricBlue DieselHydrogen
Yield per tonne plastic~850 kg oil~60-120 kg H2
Energy content per tonne output44 MJ/kg120 MJ/kg
Market price~$0.70-$0.85/liter ($585/tonne VLSFO)$3-$8/kg
Revenue per tonne of plastic (100 TPD)850 L × $0.80 = $68080 kg × $5 = $400
Storage complexitySimple — standard tanksHigh — pressure or cryo
Transport complexityTrivial — any tankerRequires ammonia or LOHC
Subsidy eligibilityLow — carbon fuelHigh — clean energy
Future demand trajectoryDeclining (IMO 2050)Rapidly growing
The surprise: On a pure $/tonne-of-feedstock basis, blue diesel actually generates more immediate revenue than hydrogen. But hydrogen has higher long-term value trajectory, subsidy access, and alignment with the decarbonization narrative that would attract investors and government support.

Recommendation: The Claw should be designed for plasma gasification (syngas → hydrogen) as the primary pathway, but HTL capability for diesel production should be studied as a backup revenue mode or Phase 1 self-fueling strategy before hydrogen export infrastructure is in place.


7. Carbon Credits from Plastic Processing

The Scientific Basis

Plastic photodegradation in the ocean produces greenhouse gases. A 2018 study (Royer et al., PLOS ONE) demonstrated:

  • Polyethylene (the dominant GPGP material) is the most prolific emitter of both methane and ethylene when exposed to sunlight
  • LDPE debris emits greenhouse gases when exposed to ambient solar radiation, with emission rates increasing over time as the surface area grows through fragmentation
  • Emissions occur both in water and air, but in air (when plastic floats or washes ashore) rates are much higher
Quantified emissions from existing marine plastics: Worst-case estimate of 2,122 tonnes CO2-eq/yr from methane + 51 tonnes/yr from ethylene (Caltrans/UC Davis study). By 2030, plastic-related GHG emissions could reach 1.34 gigatons/yr (CIEL report) — equivalent to 295 new 500 MW coal plants.

Can You Get Carbon Credits for Removing Ocean Plastic?

In theory, yes. By removing plastic before it photodegrades over decades into methane and ethylene, you prevent future GHG emissions. This is analogous to avoided-deforestation credits.

Methodological challenges:

ChallengeDetail
AdditionalityWould this plastic have been removed anyway? (Probably not — nobody else processes plastic at sea)
BaselineWhat would happen to the plastic without intervention? Must model decades of photodegradation rates
PermanenceDoes processing permanently prevent emissions? (Yes — plasma gasification destroys the polymer)
LeakageDoes removal here cause emissions elsewhere? (No obvious leakage pathway)
MeasurementHow do you quantify the avoided emissions from a specific mass of ocean plastic?
Double countingIf you also sell the hydrogen, are you double-claiming?
The additionality case is unusually strong for The Claw: there is literally no alternative mechanism to process plastic in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The baseline scenario is continued photodegradation for decades.

Verra Plastic Waste Reduction Standard

Verra (the world's largest carbon credit registry) launched a Plastic Waste Reduction Standard specifically for plastic recovery and recycling projects.

MetricDetail
Credit typePlastic Waste Reduction Credits (not carbon credits)
Price range$200-$800 per tonne of plastic
Average price (PCX exchange)~$200/tonne
Ocean cleanup premiumHigher than landfill collection — ocean recovery has higher costs and social impact
First buyerCaudalie (French cosmetics)
Other buyersClarins, Mars, GreenPrint, ACT Commodities
Market size$462M (2024) → projected $1.79B by 2031, CAGR 23.6%
Key distinction: Plastic credits and carbon credits are separate instruments. The Claw could potentially claim BOTH: 1. Plastic credits for tonnes of ocean plastic removed and processed 2. Carbon credits for avoided GHG emissions from photodegradation prevention

However, the carbon credit methodology for prevented ocean plastic photodegradation does not yet exist in any major registry. This would require developing a new methodology — possible but requiring 1-2 years of work with Verra or Gold Standard.

Who Buys Plastic Credits?

  • Consumer goods companies with plastic packaging commitments (Caudalie, Clarins, Mars, Unilever)
  • Companies with EPR (Extended Producer Responsibility) obligations under EU or national regulations
  • Shipping companies facing EU-ETS costs
  • Corporate ESG/sustainability programs
  • Voluntary market participants seeking brand differentiation

8. Revenue Model Comparison

Assumptions for All Scenarios

ParameterValueBasis
Processing rate100 TPD (36,500 tonnes/yr)Full-scale Claw
H2 yield80 kg/tonneMid-range estimate for PE-dominant feedstock
Blue diesel yield850 kg/tonnePNAS 2021 data, PE/PP feedstock
Hydrogen price (delivered)$5.00/kgMid-range, post-transport
Diesel price$0.80/liter (~$585/tonne)VLSFO 2025 average
Plastic credit price$400/tonneMid-range for ocean recovery
Carbon credit (avoided degradation)$50/tonne CO2-eqConservative — methodology unproven
CO2-eq avoided per tonne plastic~3 tonnes (lifecycle)Estimated, needs validation
Operating days330/yr (90% uptime)Weather, maintenance
Feedstock cost$0Ocean plastic is free; collection cost is operational

Revenue Scenario Comparison

Revenue StreamAnnual RevenueCost/Tonne ProcessedRevenue/Tonne ProcessedNet/Tonne
A. Hydrogen sales only80 kg × 33,000 t × $5 = $13.2MSee OPEX below$400~$200
B. Blue diesel production850 L × 33,000 t × $0.80 = $22.4MSee OPEX below$680~$480
C. Plastic credits only33,000 t × $400 = $13.2MSee OPEX below$400~$200
D. H2 (surplus) + credits$4.8M + $13.2M = $18.0MSee OPEX below$545~$345
E. Diesel + credits$22.4M + $13.2M = $35.6MSee OPEX below$1,080~$880
F. H2 (all) + credits + carbon$13.2M + $13.2M + $5.0M = $31.4MSee OPEX below$950~$750

Estimated Annual Operating Costs (100 TPD)

Cost CategoryAnnual EstimateNotes
Crew (30-40 people)$4.0MOffshore pay premium
Maintenance$3.0MElectrode replacement, salt corrosion
Supply runs$1.5MFood, parts, consumables
Hydrogen transport$2.5MTanker charter (if exporting H2)
Insurance$1.0MOffshore platform
Haber-Bosch consumables$0.5MIf ammonia synthesis installed
Diesel transport$0.8MIf diesel pathway (simpler tanker logistics)
Miscellaneous$1.0M
TOTAL (H2 export mode)$13.5MHydrogen pathway
TOTAL (diesel mode)$11.3MDiesel pathway (simpler logistics)
TOTAL (self-powered + credits only)$9.5MNo fuel export infrastructure

Net Annual Income by Scenario

ScenarioGross RevenueOPEXNet IncomeBreakeven Feedstock Rate
A. H2 only$13.2M$13.5M-$0.3M101 TPD — barely viable alone
B. Diesel only$22.4M$11.3M+$11.1M52 TPD
C. Credits only$13.2M$9.5M+$3.7M72 TPD
D. H2 (surplus) + credits$18.0M$13.5M+$4.5M75 TPD
E. Diesel + credits$35.6M$11.3M+$24.3M33 TPD
F. H2 (all) + credits + carbon$31.4M$13.5M+$17.9M43 TPD

Key Takeaways from the Revenue Comparison

1. Hydrogen alone does not pay the bills. At current prices, exporting hydrogen from a remote ocean platform barely breaks even, because transport adds $1.50-$2.00/kg to the cost. This changes if hydrogen prices rise or if The Claw qualifies for $3/kg IRA tax credits.

2. Blue diesel is the highest-revenue near-term option — surprisingly. The yield is enormous (850 kg per tonne vs. 80 kg of H2), and the market is immediate. But it has no decarbonization narrative and faces declining long-term demand.

3. Plastic credits are the most capital-efficient revenue stream. No additional equipment needed beyond the core gasification system. Revenue is directly proportional to tonnes processed. The $400/tonne mid-range is conservative — ocean cleanup premiums could push this to $600-$800.

4. The combined diesel + credits model is the highest revenue at $24.3M/yr net. But it is philosophically problematic: you are cleaning the ocean to make diesel, which contributes to the problem that creates the ocean plastic in the first place.

5. The best long-term model is hydrogen + plastic credits + carbon credits (Scenario F). It generates $17.9M/yr net, aligns with the decarbonization narrative, qualifies for government subsidies, and positions The Claw as a clean energy producer, not just a cleanup operation.

6. Self-powered operation with credit sales (Scenario C) is the minimum viable revenue model — $3.7M/yr net with the simplest operational profile. This is the fallback if hydrogen markets don't materialize as expected.


Summary Decision Framework

QuestionAnswer
Can The Claw produce hydrogen?Yes — 60-120 kg H2 per tonne of ocean plastic
Is it enough to self-power?Yes — with 2-4x surplus even after ocean penalties
Can hydrogen be monetized from the GPGP?Marginal alone — transport costs eat the margin. Viable with 45V tax credits
Best storage for ocean export?Ammonia (Phase 3) or compressed gas (Phase 1-2)
Is diesel a better product?Near-term yes (higher yield, simpler logistics). Long-term no (declining market, no subsidy)
Do plastic credits stack?Yes — they are additive to any fuel revenue
What is the single biggest revenue unlock?Qualifying for IRA 45V credits at $3/kg. This alone turns Scenario A from -$0.3M to +$8.5M/yr
Recommended primary strategy?Phase 1: Self-power + plastic credits. Phase 2: Hydrogen export + credits. Phase 3: Ammonia conversion + credits + potential 45V qualification

Sources

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