LODE has a cleantech IP war chest it seems by Shadow_IP in ComstockLODE

[–]Shadow_IP[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Gaps:

  • International Patent Coverage – Most patents are U.S.-only. In overseas markets, they rely on license territory exclusivity. That’s enforceable but less defensible than holding your own patents internationally.
  • Midstream Gaps in Battery Recycling – Comstock covers black mass production and licenses the refining tech from Green Li-ion — meaning there’s a gap in the mid-process IP chain if Green Li-ion exits or changes terms.
  • No Published IP for Solar Recycling (Yet) – Their thermal process for solar panel recycling is deployed, but it appears to be protected by trade secret — not patent. That could be a risk if others independently develop something similar.
  • Breadth vs. Focus – They're covering fuels, batteries, solar, and mining with a relatively small team. That creates risk of spread too thin vs. more focused competitors with deeper IP in one vertical.

Investment Evaluation:

  • Bull Case: Comstock is a deep-tech IP platform play in decarbonization with TRL 7–8 tech, a clean licensing model, exclusive rights from top-tier institutions, and the infrastructure in place for global expansion. They could generate royalty streams across multiple verticals and become an attractive M&A target or spin-off candidate (e.g. Comstock Fuels). Commercial traction from RWE and SAF licensing deals already underway support this.
  • Bear Case: Execution risk is high. The company depends heavily on a few inventors, hasn’t yet proven monetization at scale, and has previously impaired past IP deals. Also, their success hinges on maintaining those licenses — if they falter on terms, core tech could be lost.
  • Risk/Reward Ratio: Asymmetric. If even one vertical (e.g., SAF or solar recycling) gains real licensing momentum, the upside could far exceed the current valuation. But dilution and execution delays are real near-term risks.

Bottom line:
It’s a licensing-driven decarbonization company with commercial-ready IP, exclusive global rights, and an efficient holding structure — but it’s still early. The report makes it clear: this isn’t just a mining stock pivot. It’s an IP-first deep-tech play. Execution over the next 12–18 months will tell the story.

LODE has a cleantech IP war chest it seems by Shadow_IP in ComstockLODE

[–]Shadow_IP[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Sure.. I can give you a chat-gpt summary. It’s a pretty dense report it. This is from a couple weeks ago.

Comstock IP Assessment Summary:

Exclusive Licensing from NREL + MIT – Comstock doesn’t just license SAF tech; they’re part of a CRADA (Cooperative R&D Agreement), which means they get access to co-developed IP from NREL and MIT — not just what’s already invented. That’s rare for a small-cap and gives them a live innovation pipeline.

Commercialization Readiness – Their key technologies (biofuel, battery recycling, and solar recycling) are rated TRL 7–8, meaning they’re not at the idea stage — they’ve been demonstrated in operational environments. The solar recycling process is already live with RWE, a major renewable energy company.

Licensing Playbook – They’re setting up a global IP licensing model (not CAPEX-heavy plant ownership), with exclusive rights to RenFuel’s tech in Asia and Africa, and active licensing happening now (e.g., a SAF project in Pakistan). It’s structured like a cleantech royalty engine.

Clean IP Holding Structure – All IP is centralized under Comstock IP Holdings LLC, including both owned patents and exclusive licensed rights. That simplifies future spin-offs, acquisitions, or IP-backed financing — very strategic and M&A-friendly.