Super-tree hugger: An ardor for arbor

Photo composite of a tree, plus a headshot portrait of Maddie Hall '14 on white background

Maddie Hall ’14 takes tree-hugging to a whole new level. To combat climate change, this Forbes Under 30 lister is seeding fast-growing, carbon-chomping super-pines and super-poplars.

Looking back, Maddie Hall ’14 wishes she had taken more science at CMC. Especially biology and computer science.

That may seem surprising coming from a plant biotech CEO recently named on the 2021 Forbes Under 30: Science list.

But Hall is keenly aware of her uniqueness among the other “scientists” on that Forbes list, nearly all of whom are MDs or PhDs.

Hall has a bachelor of arts in government and psychology. That hasn’t held her back.

“People from CMC do really well in tech because it’s this gritty, merit-based industry where, if you’re really smart, you hustle and you’re scrappy, then you can go really far,” says the Seattle native.

Hall, who turned 29 in April, co-founded Living Carbon with paleobiologist Patrick Mellor in 2019. The startup is developing genetically engineered pines and poplars that grow much faster, absorb twice the carbon dioxide and produce more durable wood than the naturally occurring species. The company will start planting its super saplings later this year. Potential customers range from private forests that feed the lumber industry to powerplants that use trees for mitigation banking to absorb runoff. Living Carbon’s long-term plans involve aggregating carbon credits associated with their trees for additional revenue streams.

Trees hold a special place in Hall’s heart. As a child, she spent vacations at her grandparents’ cabins in Sequim Bay and Mt. Rainier. Her grandmother served on the board of the Seattle Arboretum. Her uncle owns a logging company with a special focus on sustainable reforestation.

Hall might have pursued botany or biology in college if not of a visual impairment that limits her ability to do lab work. Born with a cataract in her left eye, she received corrective surgery in infancy that restored her sight but denied her the benefit of binocular vision.

“Even pipetting is very challenging for me,” she says.

At CMC, she focused on government and psychology. Upon graduating, she moved to San Francisco and worked her way up the product management ladder at Zenefits, First Round Capital, OpenAI and Y Combinator (YC).

In 2019, CEO Sam Altman asked her to take a deep dive into the hard science behind carbon-dioxide removal ahead of a YC request for startups.

She enrolled in online classes and immersed herself in the carbon-capture scholarly literature, and “I just became so enamored with synthetic plant biology,” Hall says.

If you can modify genes in row crops, she wondered, why not in timber? Trees were already being genetically engineered for disease resistance, but no one had tried it with climate mitigation in mind.

At academic conferences, she’d hang out by the doors between sessions, striking up conversations with researchers. “I just wanted to network myself into the space,” she recalls.

She began thinking about a career change. “I saw so much really good research being done in labs, and it just wasn’t going anywhere,” she recalls. “No one from tech was leaving to go launch a tree startup. I realized if I didn’t try to do this, I would be unhappy with myself.”

When she and Mellor turned up as presenters at the Foresight Institute’s 2019 Vision Weekend, the synergy was unmistakable. His talk was on slowing the rate of fungal decomposition in trees. Hers was on the genetic-enhancement opportunities in photosynthesis.

“We were each working on opposite sides of the puzzle,” she recalls.

Within a couple of months, they had a business plan to profitably remove CO2 from the atmosphere at the billion-ton scale. A month later, they landed their first venture capital backer.

“The next step,” Hall says, “is getting the trees in the ground.”

Field plantings are set to begin later this year, and she expects to have millions of trees pre-ordered by the end of 2022. If all goes well, the first Living Carbon timber harvest will be in 2028.

Though Hall has mastered the science around super-trees, she admits, “I’m always flattered when people think that I am a biologist.” She sees herself as a “lifelong novice.”

“As the CEO of a biotech company, you need a pretty technical understanding of what’s happening in the lab,” she says. “I force myself to do one or two experiments a quarter, whether it’s just making media or transforming a plant. It helps me build solidarity and empathy with the scientific team.”

Though she wishes she’d taken more science courses, Hall recognizes how well her CMC education and connections have served her.

Two of Carbon Life’s early investors—T-Bird Capital partner Miles T. Bird ’13 and Village Global co-founder Ben Casnocha ’11—come from the CMC community.

Hall is already paying forward her debt of gratitude by being an active and enthusiastic alum. She regularly participates in college VC events through the Randall Lewis Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship and is, for the second time, a CIE mentor this year. Living Carbon recently hired two CMC student interns in San Francisco and its Charleston, North Carolina, research lab.

In 2019, she attended her five-year reunion. Undoubtedly the first of many to come.

Diane Krieger

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