Yes, the pun was mediocre at best, but the concept is awesome — stick with us.
Startup Cambium is chipping away at recycling the 36m trees that fall each year due to development, natural disasters, disease, or decay, per CNBC.
Traditionally, those fallen trees are either burned, sent to a landfill, or turned into mulch — a process that produces carbon emissions and wastes energy.
To fix the system — and capitalize on the global demand for wood, which could grow 54% between 2010 and 2050 — Cambium is turning to tech:
Once wood is in the system, it can be purchased and delivered across the US and parts of Canada.
Part of Cambium’s appeal — and there’s lots: the startup has raised $28.5m in funding — is that it can serve customers on both sides of the lumber industry, working with buyers and sellers.
So far, the startup claims its Carbon Smart Wood has diverted 3.4m board feet from the waste stream.
But can it answer the biggest question of all: When a tree falls in the woods, does it make a sound?