Steel is one of the hardest industries on the planet to clean up. It depends heavily on metallurgical coal, a carbon-intensive input that's woven into blast furnace operations worldwide. That's exactly the problem Aymium and Japan's Hanwa Co., Ltd. are aiming to fix with a landmark new agreement signed on March 14, 2026.
The two companies signed a memorandum of understanding to advance construction of a new biocarbon and biohydrogen production facility in the United States. The deal, first reported by Bloomberg, targets a definitive agreement in April and carries a combined value of more than $500 million, covering both facility construction and long-term offtake agreements.
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The planned U.S. facility will produce two renewable products, biocarbon and biohydrogen, both derived from sustainably sourced biomass through a combustion-free thermochemical process. These aren't niche lab materials. Aymium's biocarbon is engineered to replace fossil coal in metallurgical applications with no process modifications or capital investment required on the buyer's side.
For Hanwa, a major Japanese trading company with deep ties to the metals and materials supply chain, this deal secures a lower-carbon coal alternative for export to Japan's steel industry. That's a meaningful shift. Japan's steelmakers have been under growing pressure to cut emissions, and green steel hubs and alternative inputs are gaining serious traction as viable solutions.
Aymium and Hanwa map out a $500M+ agreement to build a U.S. facility producing biocarbon and biohydrogen for lower-carbon steelmaking and export to Japan.
Aymium isn't a startup chasing a concept. The Minnesota-based company is the global leader in biocarbon technology, with proven production at multiple North American facilities. Its patented process converts recovered, unusable wood into high-purity biocarbon and biohydrogen through integrated thermolysis, generating its own renewable energy in the process.
The company has already demonstrated this at commercial scale and built a global sales pipeline through trials with leading metals producers. It's also backed by serious institutional investors including Rio Tinto, Steel Dynamics, Nippon Steel Trading, and Hokuriku Electric Power. The Hanwa MOU continues a clear pattern: major industrial players choosing Aymium as their preferred partner for bioenergy with carbon capture and storage pathways in heavy industry.
"Our mission is to accelerate the transition away from fossil fuels and reduce the impact on the environment."
James Mennell, CEO, Aymium
That mission now extends across the Pacific. This MOU opens a direct export pathway from a new U.S. production facility to Japanese steelmakers, which adds an economic dimension to the clean energy story. American biomass becomes a renewable industrial input, U.S. jobs are created, and Japan moves closer to meeting its own decarbonization commitments.
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This deal sits at a critical intersection. Sustainable steel manufacturing has become one of the most urgent challenges for heavy industry, and demand for drop-in coal alternatives is accelerating fast. Biocarbon is uniquely suited to this moment because it requires no new equipment investment, making the adoption curve much shorter than other clean technologies.
On the hydrogen side, the Aymium-Hanwa facility adds fresh momentum to low-carbon hydrogen production from biogenic sources. Unlike electrolysis-based green hydrogen, Aymium's biohydrogen co-production doesn't rely on renewable electricity infrastructure, which makes the economics more predictable at scale. Federal interest in industrial decarbonization funding has also helped create a supportive environment for projects like this one.
"Aymium, together with its partners, has developed a proven production process that is an important building block to help decarbonize industrial processes, like steel making, and power generation."
Reiner Boehning, Managing Partner, ECP ForeStar
This isn't the first time Aymium has connected its biocarbon technology to Japanese industry. The company already supplies Hokuriku Electric Power and Nippon Steel Trading under a long-term contract, and in June 2024 closed $210 million in financing to construct a facility in Williams, California, aimed at large-scale coal replacement in power generation. Hanwa extends that network further into the metals supply chain.
Key partners and projects show how biocarbon is scaling across steel and power sectors, replacing coal inputs and expanding low-carbon industrial supply chains.
The biocarbon market is maturing fast, and deals like this one signal that carbon-negative industrial inputs are moving from pilot projects to billion-dollar supply agreements. The carbon removal credits tied to biocarbon production are also gaining premium value, adding a parallel revenue dimension for producers like Aymium.
With a definitive agreement expected in April 2026, the construction planning phase will move quickly. Key milestones to watch include the U.S. facility site selection, confirmation of the long-term offtake volume for Hanwa's Japan network, and whether any additional investors or partners join the project before financial close.
Even as the broader U.S. carbon capture landscape navigates a shifting policy environment, private-sector momentum for industrial decarbonization deals like this one is clearly building on its own terms. Aymium and Hanwa aren't waiting for a perfect policy backdrop. They're building the infrastructure now.
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