Air Products and Chemicals Inc.—a company that has spent the better part of a decade positioning itself as a serious player in clean energy transition—has quietly axed plans for a multibillion-dollar hydrogen and carbon capture project in Louisiana. The project, which presumably involved hydrogen production and CO2 capture at a scale befitting its astronomical budget, is now officially dead. No announcement. No drama. Just gone, the way your gym membership quietly stops charging you after you stop showing up.
For those unfamiliar with Air Products' value proposition: it's an industrial gas company that actually generates real revenue selling stuff like oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen to refineries, steelmakers, and semiconductor manufacturers. That's the boring part. The exciting part—the part that got board presentations made and investor calls scheduled—was the bet that Air Products could pivot into a decarbonized future by building massive hydrogen complexes and capturing carbon dioxide like it was going out of style. A multibillion-dollar project in Louisiana was supposed to be the flagship proof of concept. Except it wasn't. And now it isn't at all.
This is hardly Air Products' first rodeo with grand clean energy ambitions. The company has been making increasingly confident bets on the hydrogen economy and carbon capture markets for years, riding the wave of ESG enthusiasm, government incentives, and the general sense that we're all going to solve climate change through industrial chemistry and venture capital. Each announcement was greeted with the kind of earnestness usually reserved for Space Force recruitment videos. Each project was supposed to be transformative. And yet, here we are, watching another multibillion-dollar complex get unceremoniously shelved.
The company likely dressed up the cancellation in the kind of language that suggests strategic pivoting rather than spectacular failure. "Market conditions,
"Clean Energy Complex"
The central bank of central banks warns that AI buildout mirrors historical busts. Silicon Valley responds by building faster.
Read more →Patronus AI secures funding based on 'nearly insatiable demand' — a phrase that means exactly nothing and somehow cost $50 million to discover.
Read more →One successful portfolio company is now indistinguishable from a strategy.
Read more →Multibillion-dollar clean energy complex joins the graveyard of decarbonization theater.
Read more →When a startup trades its entire business model for a phone call from the administration.
Read more →A measured correction is what we're calling it when you realize you've been funding vaporware at 100x revenue multiples.
Read more →When credential inflation meets credential obliteration: a $75 billion firm discovers that Grand Slam titles translate to board-room insight.
Read more →Frontier labs promise AI agents will delegate tasks to humans any day now.
Read more →A panel of capital allocators questions valuations they themselves are responsible for inflating.
Read more →The search giant races to build AI infrastructure while its environmental footprint hits record highs—a masterclass in having your carbon cake and eating it too.
Read more →Apple and Microsoft are raising hardware prices because training AI models is apparently someone else's problem to solve.
Read more →Established mega-fund raises $2.5B by simply deciding what it was raising all along.
Read more →Markets have replaced price discovery with Kevin Warsh fan fiction.
Read more →Washington's alliance pitch crumbles as Beijing's cheap models prove usefulness trumps ideology.
Read more →Two AI investors known for moving fast offer wisdom on moving fast, a genre of advice that has never once prevented anything.
Read more →DumbCapital covers venture capital and M&A in North America with the skepticism these markets have long deserved and rarely received. We are not impressed by large numbers. We are not moved by press releases. All articles are satirical commentary based on real, publicly reported deals. Nothing here is financial advice.