Investing in cleaner oceans

Good Design Award-winning Seabin raises $1M in equity crowdfunding.

Aussie ocean-cleaning startup Seabin has smashed its minimum equity crowdfunding target, raising $1 million in investment in just four days. Ocean cleaning start-up, Seabin Project, officially launched public offers for the ‘Public for Purpose’ campaign. Within 4 days of launching on equity crowdfunding platform Birchal, 661 members of the public invested and exceeded the company’s minimum goal of one million dollars for their first phase scaling. The goal is now to hit the $3 million maximum target before the 19th March for full scaling of the company, operations and the technology.

New waste sector means new investment opportunities.

Smart waste management is a sector which has endless opportunities in smart and urban cities. The advanced technology has provided endless solutions and improved conventional methods like never before.

The Seabin is currently installed in 53 countries. Howth, a harbour based village in Dublin, Ireland has gone one step further in adopting the Seabin technology for the water and “solar smart bins” on land in an effort to be more efficient with waste leakage.

The Seabin smart tech’s attention has not stopped there, In a blog post last Friday the world’s largest tech company, Microsoft, commended Seabin’s “Profit For Purpose” business model, combining education and technology to not only remove plastics from our oceans, but prevent them from entering in the first place.

Microsoft also acknowledged the Seabin Project, along with 2 other start-ups, as examples of one of the most important innovations of the past decade: “The growing recognition that building a business can be a powerful way to be a force for progress to benefit people and the planet. It’s an idea that has been gaining momentum,” says Jean-Philippe Courtois Global Sales, Marketing and Services for Microsoft International.

This Microsoft campaign article is further reinforced by Good Design Australia including the Seabin smart tech in the top 10 designs of the decade.

“Every year, the Good Design Awards attracts the best in design and innovation from across Australia and around the world.  With the 2020 Good Design Awards open for entry, we assembled our Top Ten Designs of the Decade to celebrate the next decade of impactful design. To compile the list, we evaluated past Good Design Award-winning projects based on the long-lasting positive impact they will have on shaping our world for the better,” said Dr. Brandon Gien, CEO of Good Design Australia.

Milestones are being met and surpassed by the team at Seabin Project who to date have not brought on any Series A Capital and relied on slow organic growth to meet their targets.

“Raising this first $1M in such a short space of time is by far the largest milestone yet for the Seabin Project. We now have had buy-in from over 950+ investors and this much-needed capital is set in place for our first phase of scaling. The initial capital raised will be injected directly into the reshoring of our manufacturing and IP to Australia,” says Seabin Project CEO and Co-Founder Pete Ceglinski.

“A huge thanks to our new shareholders for their ongoing support. In 2015, we handed out hats and stickers to crowdfund working capital and we have always felt a debt of gratitude for this. So now, we are offering equity instead of hats and stickers,” concluded Mr. Ceglinski.

The Seabin Project has partnered with the Australian equity crowdfunding platform Birchal aiming to raise AUD $3M through public investment to scale production and operations, maximising the market opportunity available with offers closing on the 19th March, 2020.

Birchal and Pozible co-founder Alan Crabbe believes that the Seabin Project campaign will only grow from here, “With the regulation changes, purpose-driven companies like the Seabin Project can involve their community and fans like never before,” stated Mr. Crabbe. “Tackling the issue of plastics in our oceans is huge and requires a strong team and passionate following. Clearly, Seabin has both, and with 950+ new owners and $1.1m+ raised so far, the future’s looking bright for Seabin Project and of course our oceans too,” ended Mr. Crabbe.

Seabin’s community-driven “profit for purpose” business model has enabled Seabin to build a large community of supporters, this equity raise will further secure a loyal shareholders base that can leverage opportunities when approaching high-level decision makers.

“We have just seen the first example of a Seabin investor on Instagram messaging City of Sydney, Lord Mayor Clover Moore to support the Seabin Project with funding and city trials. Seabin is looking to amplify examples like this in the aim of fast-tracking government relationships,” concluded Pete Ceglinski.

Visit Seabin Projects Public For Purpose Campaign page and register your interest: https://www.birchal.com/company/seabinproject  

Click here for high-resolution images of the Seabin in action

For further comments or to interview Seabin CEO and Co-Founder, Pete Ceglinski please contact Luke Dean-Weymark from Compass Studio on 0412 356 727 or [email protected] 

Additional Information:

Seabin smart tech daily impact includes

  1.   860+ operational Seabin units (current).
  2.   52 countries (current).
  3.   500+ million litres of water filtered each day for microplastics, oil and more.
  4.   Approx. 3.6 tons of marine litter and floating plastic prevented from entering our oceans each day.

Always consider the general CSF risk warning and offer document before investing.

 

TOP 10 DESIGNS OF THE DECADE

Every year, the Good Design Awards attracts the best in design and innovation from across Australia and around the world.

With the 2020 Good Design Awards open for entry, we assembled our Top Ten Designs of the Decade to celebrate the next decade of impactful design.

To compile the list, we evaluated past Good Design Award-winning projects based on the long-lasting positive impact they will have on shaping our world for the better.

This is the result, in no particular order.

 


The design that sparked the electric transport revolution.

TESLA MODEL S
2015 Good Design Award of the Year Winner

Model S was the world’s first premium sedan built from the ground up as an electric vehicle when it took out the coveted Good Design Award of the Year in 2015. It was engineered to deliver unprecedented range and a thrilling drive experience and to this day, remains one of the fastest four-door vehicles ever built.

The Good Design Award of the Year Winning Model S changed the game for electric cars and has since gone on to become one of the most valuable car brands in the world. MORE

 


A ground-breaking design innovation that delivers fresh honey at the turn of a handle.

FLOW HIVE
2016 Good Design Award of the Year Winner

The Flow Hive system is a whole new way of extracting honey from honeybee hives. This world-first design revolutionised the honey-extraction process by allowing anyone to make honey in their backyard with a simple turn of a handle which splits the honey cells and allowing gravity to do the rest – the honey simply flows into the trough and into your jar. MORE

 


Clever design thinking to help solve a problem affecting 3.5 billion people.

LUCKY IRON FISH
2016 Good Design Award Best in Class Winner

Lucky Iron Fish is a game-changing design that aims to wipe out iron deficiency, which affects 3.5 billion people worldwide and can result in anaemia, weakness, impaired cognition, and illness. Through clever design and deep empathy with village elders in Cambodia, the design team learned about a fish species deemed a symbol of good luck, health, and happiness.

They created fish-shaped iron ingots and distributed these to villagers to use in their daily cooking routine. This innovative breakthrough led to immediate increases in blood iron levels amongst the villagers and anaemia was virtually eliminated.

The Good Design Award Best in Class Winner gives a family up to 90% of their required iron intake when used daily during food preparation. MORE

 


Innovative thinking to help rid our oceans from plastic pollution.

SEABIN PROJECT
2018 Good Design Award Best in Category Winner

With an estimated eight million tonnes of plastic rubbish entering the world’s oceans each year, the Seabin is helping solve a gigantic problem.

This game-changing design is a “trash skimmer” designed to be installed in the water of marinas, yacht clubs, ports and any water body with a calm environment and suitable services available. MORE

 


3D bioprinting designed to help fight cancer.

INVEANTIA RASTRUM 3D BIOPRINTER
2019 Good Design Award of the Year Winner

The Inventia Rastrum 3D Bioprinter is a revolutionary 3D bioprinting platform driven by the needs of biomedical researchers and tissue engineers. Rastrum uses drop-on-demand deposition to 3D print living cells precisely and safely.

With applications in cell-based research and regenerative medicine, Rastrum has the potential to revolutionise biomedical research. MORE

 


Design that cleans the equivalent of 340 Olympic-sized swimming pools of water every year.

SYDNEY PARK WATER RE-USE PROJECT
2018 Good Design Award of the Year Winner

How will Sydney cope as its population swells to eight million people by the middle of the century? The city engaged a team of designers, engineers, water technologists, ecologists, and artists to deliver a complex vision in response to this problem. Given the site’s magnitude, the team focused on water harvesting and re-use to ensure waterway health and to future-proof water supply for the site.

The project has enhanced circulation of water through the ponds and wetlands, diverting 840 megalitres per annum of local stormwater for treatment and re-use, renewing ecosystems and creating greener and more functional public amenity. MORE

 


Out of the box thinking that takes your wheelchair on the beach.

GECKO TRAXX
2019 Good Design Award Best in Class Winner

Gecko Traxx is a portable and affordable wheelchair accessory that enables off-road access for manual wheelchair users. A flexible set of over-tyres that can fit inside a backpack, it secures around the existing tyres of a wheelchair for when challenging terrain is encountered, giving immediate off-road capability. MORE

 


Clever thinking that turns discarded fishing nets into beautiful carpets.

NET-EFFECT
2014 Good Design Award for Sustainability

Net-Effect is all about saving oceans, funding communities and turning waste into beauty. Designed as an innovative system to harvest discarded fishing nets in our ocean, the game-changing process turns these nets into beautiful, sustainable and hardwearing commercial carpet tiles. Good for business and good for our environment. MORE

 


Design that disrupted the taxi industry forever.

UBER
2015 Good Design Award Best in Class Winner

Uber is an innovative ride-hailing application that has revolutionised the way we travel and completely disrupted a market. Today, the company is based in San Francisco and has operations in over 785 metropolitan areas worldwide. As of 2019, Uber is estimated to have over 110 million worldwide users. MORE

 


Good design helping save our Great Barrier Reef.

RANGERBOT
2019 Good Design Award for Sustainability

RangerBot is the world’s first vision-based underwater robotic system designed specifically for coral reef environments.

Its unique design and intuitive user interface provides end-users (coral reef managers, researchers, and community groups) with a targeted, affordable and reconfigurable solution for upscaling monitoring and management of reef ecosystems worldwide. MORE