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DiviGas is a technology company.
DiviGas develops advanced polymeric membranes designed for efficient hydrogen separation and purification in industrial applications. Their core product is a novel membrane fiber capable of separating hydrogen and carbon dioxide, engineered to withstand acidic gases and operate effectively at high temperatures. This technology offers a less energy-intensive and environmentally cleaner alternative to traditional sorbent-based separation methods, particularly addressing hydrogen losses common in existing industrial processes.
The company was co-founded by Andre Lorenceau, who serves as CEO, leveraging his background as a serial entrepreneur with prior experience leading B2B ventures. DiviGas emerged from an insight into the need for more effective and sustainable hydrogen purification, recognizing the limitations and environmental impact of conventional methods. This led to the development of a radically new process for manufacturing their next-generation membranes, aimed at advancing clean industrial technologies.
DiviGas targets industrial clients such as refineries, chemical processors, and other industrial facilities requiring gas separation and purification systems. Their vision is to enhance the sustainability of industrial processes by providing essential infrastructure for the growing hydrogen economy. The company aims to facilitate cleaner hydrogen production and utilization through their innovative membrane technology, contributing to more efficient and environmentally responsible industrial operations globally.
DiviGas has raised $4.0M across 1 funding round.
DiviGas has raised $4.0M in total across 1 funding round.
DiviGas has raised $4.0M in total across 1 funding round.
DiviGas's investors include Energy Revolution Ventures, MANN+HUMMEL, Atlantic Bridge, Earlybird Venture Capital, Finch Capital, Insight Partners, Molten Ventures, Smash Capital, SOSV, Union Square Ventures, Albert Wenger, Amasia.
DiviGas is a Singapore-based cleantech startup founded in 2020 that develops advanced polymeric membranes for hydrogen purification, targeting the $94B grey hydrogen industry and beyond. Its flagship Divi-H membrane achieves up to 99.95% hydrogen purity from diverse feedstocks, including those mixed with CO2, acidic gases, and heavy molecules, while boosting plant profits by 188% to 2058% through superior performance and affordability.[1][2][4] The company serves industrial players in hydrogen production, such as oil & gas corporations, with applications in fuel gas recovery, syngas adjustment, carbon capture, and biomass gasification; it has secured 17 paid pilots (including with multi-billion-dollar firms) and projects $3.3M in 2025 revenue, signaling strong growth momentum amid a lengthening sales cycle offset by rising demand for green H2 tech.[1][2]
DiviGas emerged in 2020 when serial entrepreneur Andre Lorenceau (CEO, Forbes 30 Under 30, prior B2B startup to post-Series B with millions in revenue) and Dr. Ali Naderi (CTO, PhD in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering from NUS, expert in gas separation membranes with 11 papers and patents) met at SOSV's HAX incubator in Singapore.[1][3][5][6] The idea stemmed from Naderi's research into dual-layer hollow fiber membranes that overcome limitations of legacy tech—handling high temperatures (up to 150°C), acidic compounds like sulfur and chlorine, and untreated feeds without degradation.[3] Early traction included a $3.6M seed round in 2021, rapid scaling to produce 1", 4", and 6" membrane modules (a key engineering milestone), and initial sales despite pre-revenue status, positioning them against slow incumbents.[1][3]
DiviGas rides the global hydrogen economy boom, projected as a cornerstone of decarbonization with demand surging for purification in green/blue/grey H2 production amid net-zero mandates. Its timing aligns perfectly with market forces like rising green H2 adoption (e.g., biomass, pyrolysis needing robust, cheap purification) and flaws in outdated tech, which fail on impure feeds—DiviGas leapfrogs these via drop-in compatible membranes.[1][3][4] By enabling higher profits and efficiency, it accelerates H2's viability in energy transition, influencing ecosystems from O&G retrofits to carbon capture, while competing against stalled startups and incumbents in a billions-scale market.[2][3]
DiviGas is primed for Series A expansion, leveraging pilot momentum toward full deployments and $3.3M+ revenue in 2025, with scaling production in Melbourne to meet green H2 tailwinds. Trends like policy-driven H2 infrastructure and tech convergence (e.g., affordable purification for electrolysis byproducts) will propel growth, potentially evolving its influence from niche innovator to standard-setter in a $94B+ industry. As hydrogen infrastructure scales, DiviGas's resilient, high-margin tech positions it to revolutionize purification where legacy methods falter most.[1][2][3]
DiviGas has raised $4.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $4.0M Seed in November 2021.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 1, 2021 | $4.0M Seed | Energy Revolution Ventures, MANN+HUMMEL | Atlantic Bridge, Earlybird Venture Capital, Finch Capital, Insight Partners, Molten Ventures, Smash Capital, SOSV, Union Square Ventures, Albert Wenger, Amasia, Climate Capital, Entrepreneur First, HAX, Volta Energy Technologies |