Pitch Deck Teardown: Metafuels’ $8M climate tech seed deck

Let’s take a deep dive into the pitch deck that climate tech startup Metafuels used to raise its $8 million seed round.
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About 2% of the world’s CO₂ emissions comes from pressurized, jet-powered sausages careening through the air. Earlier this week, I covered one startup, Metafuels, that thinks it has a solution for reducing aircraft emmisions.

I was able to talk the company’s founders into giving me the pitch deck for their $8 million seed round as well so we could do a deep dive into the materials the company used to raise the funding.

We’re looking for more unique pitch decks to tear down, so if you want to submit your own, here’s how you can do that.

Slides in this deck

Metafuels was kind enough to share its full deck with TechCrunch+ for this teardown. There are some minor redactions, but the bulk of this slide deck is intact.

Cover slide
Market size slide
Product / technology slide3
Product manufacturing slide
Unit economics (production at scale numbers)
Unique selling points
Technology roadmap
Business model slide (production)
Business model slide (licensing)
  Commercialization slide
  Market traction slide
  Team slide
  Closing slide

Three things to love

If you’ve been reading my Pitch Deck Teardowns, even skimming the list of slides above will make you go “Uh oh, Haje’s not gonna be happy with this — there’s a ton of information missing!” And yes, you would absolutely be right. This is an interesting challenge with deep tech startups, however: If it’s going to take a hot minute to get your product to market, there will, by definition, be a lot of things missing.

Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No, it’s a high-soaring market size

It takes a special kind of chutzpah to say “all aircraft fuel” is your market, but that’s what Metafuels is doing here.

[Slide 2] Gunning for 70% of the plane fuel market is hella bold. I like it. Image Credits: Metafuels

The market size for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) is currently pretty limited. In 2022, around 300 million liters of sustainable aviation fuel was produced, and that doubled this year to more than 600 million liters, per the International Air Transport Association (IATA). That is a drop in the veritable ocean of all fuel used worldwide. There was a significant dip during the pandemic years, butin 2019, around 360 billion liters of fuel was used by commercial airlines.

In other words, SAF represents around 0.17% of all aviation fuel consumed.

It’s no surprise, then, that Metafuels decided to start its projections from 2030. That’s when the company will hit its stride going into full production, and also when the market is likely to take off. The big forcing function is the RefuelEU Aviation regulation, which sets targets for blending sustainable fuel in with its petroleum counterparts.

Metafuels tells the story well: You get a picture of a rapidly growing market, and the company positions itself as a crucial player in it.

You can learn from this slide how to tie the ‘why now’ part of your story to wider macro changes. If you know which way the wind is blowing, you can set your company up to make the most of it.

Let yourself nerd out about the tech

When you’re building a deep tech company, the tallest pole in the tent is always going to be the tech itself. What have you figured out that nobody else has been able to nail down?

[Slide 4] Ugh, yes, talk nerdy to me, baby. Image Credits: Metafuels

Metafuels has found the one exception to the “your investors don’t give a crap about your product” rule: This is a deep tech company that will fail or succeed entirely based on what it’s able to deliver on the tech side. It’s refreshing to see a three-slide set (slides 3-5) talking through the process itself, how it works at scale, and how the company can produce the fuel at a reasonable price.

A clear roadmap

[Slide 7] I love the clarity of Metafuels’ plan. Image Credits: Metafuels

Make it work, then make it work at small scale, then scale to production scale. This is a pretty obvious route to take, but it’s rarely spelled out this clearly. Slide 10 then breaks down how the company can scale from 50 liters per day to 700 million liters per day — that’s a hell of a scaling operation.

The main takeaway from this part of the deck is to keep an eye on the future and how you can scale later. Having a clear view of the unit economics in particular (i.e., how the financials of your products change as you start increasing volume) is often a crucial part of the story.

Here, Metafuels is talking about producing 1 to 2 liters per day, then scaling that by 700 million. That’s… a hell of an undertaking. And while the manufacturing processes and factories for producing that much fuel will be expensive, the cost per liter will come down dramatically. Metafuels is tackling that beautifully in this deck.

In the rest of this teardown, we’ll take a look at three things Metafuels could have improved or done differently, along with its full pitch deck!

 


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