Specialty activated carbon technologies for mercury capture and PFAS 'forever chemical' water purification.
Birchtech Corp. (NYSE American: BCHT) leads in specialty activated carbon technologies for air and water treatment. The patented SEA® sorbent technology captures mercury in coal utilities. The breakthrough Carbon Rejuvenation™ process thermally regenerates spent granular activated carbon while destroying PFAS forever chemicals.
NYSE American uplisting completed February 2026 alongside a $15M capital raise. A $78M federal court judgment affirms the company's IP value. Construction of the first GAC rejuvenation facility planned for 2026.

Birchtech stands at the intersection of proven IP value and massive regulatory tailwinds.
Federal court judgment affirms technology value — exceeding current market cap. Collection proceedings underway with proven $37M+ licensing track record.
Validated by municipal utilities: thermally rejuvenated GAC matches virgin carbon for PFAS removal while destroying contaminants. A first in the industry.
February 2026 uplisting to NYSE American expands institutional visibility and liquidity with $15M concurrent raise.
Federal PFAS regulations creating massive addressable market. Utilities nationwide face compliance deadlines driving urgent demand for cost-effective solutions.
First GAC rejuvenation facility (2026 construction, late 2027 operation) creates recurring revenue through supply, regeneration, and service.
SEA® mercury capture sorbent widely deployed across U.S. coal sector. Additional licensing agreements secured with regional utilities.
February 2026 — $15M offering at $2.40/share expanding institutional access.
December 2025 — U.S. District Court of Delaware increased judgment. Collection proceedings initiated.
January 2026 — Municipal utility demonstrations confirm rGAC matches virgin carbon for PFAS.
Construction 2026, operational late 2027 for regional rGAC initiative.
Collection on $78M court judgment
GAC rejuvenation facility construction
Municipal PFAS contract conversions
Federal compliance deadlines driving demand