Turning fallen trees into traceable materials.
Best for: Architects, designers, builders, sustainability teams, and founders looking for practical examples of circular materials, urban wood reuse, and traceable sourcing.
Website: cambiumcarbon.com
Cambium begins where most people stop paying attention: after a tree comes down.
A storm-damaged tree. A diseased tree. A tree removed for construction, safety, decay, or development. In many communities, that wood becomes a disposal problem. It is chipped, burned, landfilled, or moved out of sight, even when the material still has value.
Cambium sees a supply chain where others see waste.
The company connects arborists, sawmills, logistics partners, manufacturers, designers, builders, and buyers. Its Carbon Smart Wood is sourced from wood affected by what Cambium calls the four Ds: disease, decay, disaster, and development.
That makes Cambium part climate company, part circular economy company, part urban forestry partner, and part supply-chain builder.
The company’s real work is not just selling wood. It is making overlooked wood usable again.
Cambium stands out because it works on the hard part of reuse.
Most people understand why it is better to use existing material than waste it. The difficult part is making that happen reliably.
Someone has to know the tree came down. Someone has to move it. Someone has to mill it. Someone has to document it. Someone has to match it with a buyer. Someone has to make sure it can meet the expectations of a real project.
Cambium is building the connective system between those steps.
That makes the company more than a reclaimed wood supplier. It is helping make circular wood usable at commercial scale.
A fallen or removed tree is usually treated as a burden.
It costs money to remove, haul, store, chip, or dispose of. Even when the wood has value, many communities do not have the relationships, infrastructure, or market access to keep it in use.
At the same time, architects, builders, brands, and developers are looking for lower-carbon materials with stronger sourcing stories. They need materials that are not only meaningful, but also available, documented, and project-ready.
Cambium works between those needs.
It helps turn scattered wood waste into traceable material that buyers can actually use.
Cambium’s business model combines technology, supply-chain coordination, and material sales.
The company helps source salvaged wood, track chain of custody, coordinate processing, and connect finished materials to buyers. Its official product lines include decking, siding, fencing, millwork, and lumber, with its 2025 Series A announcement also describing expansion into mass timber.
The practical value is reliability. The storytelling value is origin.
A builder needs material that performs. A designer needs material that fits the project. A company needs sourcing it can explain. Cambium helps connect those needs through wood that already exists.
In its February 2025 Series A announcement, Cambium said it had moved over 8 million board feet of wood from waste streams and accounted for over 10,000 tonnes of CO2 impact. the atmosphere.
Those dated company-reported figures help show scale, but Cambium’s work also has a human dimension.
A tree from a city, campus, neighborhood, or property can become a table, floor, wall panel, beam, or part of a building. The material carries place with it.
That kind of traceability is useful in a market where climate and sustainability claims are increasingly questioned. Cambium gives buyers a way to explain not only what they used, but where it came from and why it matters.
We’re featuring Cambium because it helps people see waste wood differently – not as debris, but as material with memory, value, and a place in the built world.
Cambium helps readers see that climate work is not always about inventing something new. Sometimes it is about building the system that lets existing resources be used better.
Know a company putting impact into practice?
HabitatPoint features mission-driven companies with practical sustainability models, useful lessons, and work worth understanding.