Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Maritime carbon capture startup using calcium oxide chemistry to capture ship exhaust CO2 as solid calcium carbonate for offloading; onboard retrofit technology for shipping decarbonization.
Seabound is a maritime carbon capture technology company developing systems that capture CO2 from ship exhaust directly onboard vessels, storing it as calcium carbonate for offloading at port — enabling the shipping industry to reduce emissions without switching to alternative fuels. Founded in 2021 and headquartered in London, Seabound has raised approximately $4.8 million in seed funding and is developing a post-combustion carbon capture approach that can retrofit onto existing ships without requiring engine replacements or fuel changes.\n\nSeabound's system works by diverting flue gas from a ship's engine exhaust through a reaction chamber containing calcium oxide (quicklime), which reacts with CO2 to form calcium carbonate — a solid, stable material that can be offloaded at port and sold as a feedstock for construction materials or industrial processes. This chemistry eliminates the need for compressed CO2 storage or cryogenic liquefaction, which are significant technical and safety challenges for onboard carbon capture. The calcium oxide can be regenerated at port facilities.\n\nIn 2025, Seabound operates in the emerging maritime decarbonization market where the International Maritime Organization (IMO) has established targets to cut shipping emissions 50% by 2050. Maritime shipping is responsible for approximately 2.5% of global CO2 emissions, and the sector faces growing regulatory pressure (EU ETS carbon pricing extending to shipping from 2024). Seabound competes with other maritime carbon capture startups and against alternative decarbonization approaches (ammonia fuel, hydrogen, LNG). The 2025 strategy focuses on completing pilot installations on commercial vessels, demonstrating the techno-economic case for operators, and partnering with port infrastructure providers for calcium oxide supply and calcium carbonate offtake.
Minneapolis HCM software rebranded from Ceridian (NYSE: DAY) ~$1.73B FY2024 revenue (+14%); Dayforce unified employee record, 6.3M users, global payroll 160+ countries competing with Workday and ADP.
Dayforce, Inc. (formerly Ceridian HCM Holding Inc.) is a Minneapolis, Minnesota-based human capital management (HCM) software company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: DAY) as an S&P 500 Information Technology component — providing cloud-native payroll, workforce management, talent management, benefits administration, and HR analytics software through the Dayforce platform to approximately 6,700 customers and 6.3 million active users globally through approximately 8,600 employees. The company rebranded from Ceridian HCM to Dayforce, Inc. in January 2024, aligning the corporate name with its flagship Dayforce product to accelerate enterprise market positioning and reduce brand confusion between the parent company and product names. In fiscal year 2024, Dayforce reported revenues of approximately $1.73 billion (+14% year-over-year), with Dayforce recurring services revenue (SaaS subscription revenue from Dayforce HCM platform customers) growing 18% as the company continued converting Ceridian's legacy Powerpay and Bureau payroll customers to the cloud-native Dayforce platform. CEO David Ossip built the Dayforce platform from scratch after acquiring Dayforce (the workforce management product, originally a Canadian startup) for Ceridian in 2012 and deploying it as Ceridian's cloud HCM replacement for the legacy mainframe payroll system — making Dayforce a rare enterprise software success story of a mature payroll company successfully transitioning its entire business to a next-generation cloud platform rather than being displaced by cloud-native challengers.
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