Jennifer Holmgren
Analyst · ROTH
Thank you, Kate, and everyone joining us today. It's been a dynamic news week and we appreciate your time on the ongoing support of LanzaTech. First, let's address the elephant in the room. Our third quarter revenue was $9.9 million, about $7 million below target. This was primarily due to two factors. One, we were expecting another LanzaTech sublicense event that would have resulted in the issuance of a second tranche of LanzaTech shares to LanzaTech in the third quarter and close to $8 million in revenue associated with that event similar to our second quarter. And two, while our CarbonSmart revenue more than doubled quarter-over-quarter to $2.2 million in Q3, due to the market dynamics of ethanol pricing being depressed in a target market for Q3 that was still significantly below our expectations for the quarter. While we are actively evaluating material cost reduction opportunities across the business as well as opportunities to reallocate resources to focus on and accelerate commercial activities, I also want to talk with you today about the evolution of our business model to accelerate revenues and profitability. Having worked with partners like [Chogang], our Silver Medal and Indian Oil Corporation to develop and construct, start up and operate six commercial scale biorefineries, we believe we have established the know-how and infrastructure to develop our own commercial projects. While LanzaTech has grown primarily with our licensing business model which allows for rapid capital light scaling, it is a tough model that leaves us dependent upon the adoption and decision cycles of our licensees and often does not allow us to capture the full value of our technology. Over the course of the past year, we have been evolving our business model to complement our licensing business and enhance our capability to develop and finance our own projects where we have more control over their timing and ultimate performance and in which we expect to achieve greater economics including greater upside for LanzaTech in the product and profits of these projects. This evolution can be seen in our recently announced project in Norway, which is expected to reach final investment decision within six months and which we expect to be the first project to be developed with our infrastructure capital partner Brookfield Asset Management, which committed $500 n for such LanzaTech projects. It can also be seen in the creation of our joint venture with the Olayan Group in the Middle East, which we expect will finance and cultivate a growing pipeline of commercial opportunities in that region. And it can be seen in another project, our Project Drake which I'm excited to announce today as it has reached a major milestone which should have significant positive impact on our fourth quarter financial performance and driving meaningful amount of income for 2025 if we rapidly finalize the agreements as expected. Comparable to a Project Dragon in the UK, Project Drake is a 30 million gallon per year EU based ethanol to sustainable aviation fuel project that we have been developing over the last three years, which will utilize ethanol from LanzaTech's waste to ethanol technology platform and convert it to SAF via the LanzaTech platform. We have completed the front end engineering and design or FEED work for inside the battery limits of this project and expect to reach final investment decision and fully finance the construction stage of this project in 2025. Today I'm announcing that we have entered into an exclusivity and financing commitment agreement with a new financial partner whereby they intend to acquire certain rights in the development of this project, fund the remaining capital needed to reach FID and enter into a development services agreement with LanzaTech for this remaining work. We expect to maintain significant upside participation in this project and have already received the first $5 million in fees associated with this agreement and expect to share more about this exciting project and its potential additional impact on our 2024 and 2025 results later in the quarter as we finalize these agreements. I want to clarify that we are not shifting to a capital intensive business model where we're taking binary company risk on individual projects. Rather, we're taking more control over our own success, shortening project development life cycles and positioning ourselves for greater upside in multiple projects by partnering with world class visionary capital partners from the earliest stages of our project development. Securing capital for development stage projects is difficult and time consuming, especially on a project by project basis, which is why we have adopted this partnership approach with strong capital partners for financing the various stages of project development and securing financing partnerships upfront and then designing and developing projects to meet our partners' investment criteria. We are also continuing to expand access to ethanol volumes produced from our licensee biorefineries in order to grow our CarbonSmart business and its margins. Today, we also announced a two-stage ethanol off-take agreement with ArcelorMittal, a short term contract with a $6 million annual revenue potential and a five year contract with annual commitments of 5,000 to 10,000 tons generating a potential $10 million to $20 million per year. This is our first long term ethanol purchase agreement which enhances our access to product and allows CarbonSmart customers to make longer, larger commitments which has the potential to significantly boost our future revenues. This progress is thanks to the foundation we developed for delivering CarbonSmart ethanol to our customers and trading ethanol from our China plant. Now let's talk further about why we're in a strong position for 2025 and beyond. If we look back at what LanzaTech team has accomplished since our last earnings call, it is truly impressive and speaks to the solid foundation we continue to build for long term growth. First, on the sustainable aviation fuel front, in addition to Project Drake, we have announced several projects and milestones which demonstrate the interest in LanzaTech ethanol produced from waste resources to produce SAF through CirculAir. That is our joint offering in partnership with LanzaTech. The global market for sustainable aviation fuel produced from ethanol is experiencing significant growth and we expect the pool of our ethanol to be picked up for SAF to grow right along with it. There are projects underway in the UK, the EU, India, Australia and New Zealand and we expect LanzaJet's Freedom Pines fuel facility here in the U.S. to start producing barrels imminently. What all these projects reinforce is the massive interest in our ethanol producing technology which provides a critical source of feedstock for the multiple SAF projects underway leveraging LanzaJet’s Technology. During the third quarter we also expanded the scope of our work with our New Zealand command to get to assess the use of municipal solid waste as a local feedstock for shaft production in New Zealand. After successfully completing feasibility study for locally grown woody waste. This builds upon the work we're doing with Wagner Sustainable Fuels in Australia, our First CirculAir Project around municipal solid waste as feedstock for their planned SAF refinery at the Port of Brisbane. And adding to a project using municipal solid waste as a feedstock to ethanol production is the master licensing agreement with SEKISUI that we signed in September to develop multiple waste to ethanol plants across Japan. We are in the early stages of executing this plan but are truly excited about developing a replicable global blueprint for other countries and businesses to follow on how to access and utilize the carbon log in local garbage. Turning now to progress with industrial off gases as a feedstock for ethanol production, our collaboration with Eramet in Norway represents what we believe to be the first of a kind integrated CCU & CCS facility designed to achieve leading edge carbon abatement results for hard to abate industries. Metals, cement, chemical shipping and aviation are among the hardest industrial sectors to evade and we see a number of avenues ahead where we can leverage and replicate the work we're doing in Norway to provide profitable decarbonization solutions to other companies grappling with the same situation. As we expand our biorefining global reach, we're also expanding our platform's capabilities. In early October, we announced our ability to produce single-cell protein, a product we're calling LanzaTech Nutritional Protein. The estimated $1 trillion alternative protein market is expected to grow significantly and our nutrient rich product is designed to be an ideal ingredient for animal feed, pet food and human nutrition that can be produced from CO2, oxygen and hydrogen anywhere in the world. Our bioreactors have been producing protein as a co-product to ethanol for years and now we have developed the capability to produce protein as the primary product. Importantly, we continue to develop partnerships with animal, pet and human food producers to enable us to aggregate demand for the production of lands of pet nutritional protein at commercial scale. To close, we are focused on a strong Q4 to finish the year with nearly two months less. There's still a lot of time on the clock to execute what we have in process. Several of the largest initiatives we have in development right now have some element of timing uncertainty, which results in a large range of potential fourth quarter financial outcomes. Those initiatives are Project Drake, where we are finalizing agreements our project in Norway, where we are preparing a package for FID review by Brookfield and Project SECURE, which we announced in March of this year and is progressing well. We are working on finalizing the contracting framework with Technip Energies and the Department of Energy. Additionally, the next LanzaJet sublicensing event and the related issuance of additional shares of LanzaJet to LanzaTech as timing uncertainty as well. It's important to note that we expect these projects will unlock access to cash that will significantly bolster our financial liquidity. I am confident that the moves we're making with our business model will improve the certainty of development timelines as we go forward and will be accretive to our short term and long term business economics. We expect these moves will allow us to control more of the feedstock operations and off stake in our asset portfolio which should increase our cash flow generation and accelerate our path to profitability. And with that, I'll turn it over to Geoff for the financial update.