Business Model Breakdown
How Clean Vision Corp Makes Money
CLNV
Market Cap
$9M
Profit Margin
-4374.3%
The Short Version
Clean Vision Corp aims to make money by converting waste materials, primarily plastics, into valuable products such as clean fuels, hydrogen, and other chemicals, using its proprietary pyrolysis technology (AquaH or PCX systems). They plan to build and operate waste processing facilities globally, selling the output to industrial customers or energy markets. The core idea is to generate revenue from the sale of these 'waste-to-value' products, but they have historically struggled to achieve commercial-scale operations and generate meaningful revenue.
Where the Revenue Comes From
Sale of converted products (e.g., fuels, hydrogen, chemicals) from waste processing facilities (~0% of current revenue, aspirational).
Potential licensing of proprietary technology to other operators (negligible to 0% of current revenue, aspirational).
Who buys: Industrial customers, energy companies, chemical manufacturers, and potentially governments seeking waste management solutions.
Why It Works (Competitive Advantages)
- ✔Proprietary technology in waste conversion (unproven at commercial scale).
- ✔Strategic partnerships (historically announced but not yet materialized into significant revenue).
Economic Moat: None (Intangible Assets/IP (claimed proprietary technology, but unproven scale and impact))
What Our Analysis Says
DVR Score as of June 6, 2026
Clean Vision Corp remains a highly speculative 'dud' with a score consistent with previous analysis, as no material positive changes have been evidenced by the provided real-time market intelligence. The company's vision in waste-to-value is compelling on paper, but persistent issues of excessive shareholder dilution, chronic cash burn, and a severe lack of material revenue generation or scaled operational asset deployment continue to plague its prospects. Its financial trajectory is unsustainable, and the leadership's track record has shown a pattern of value destruction. Without a clear path to profitability, significant revenue growth, or a demonstrated competitive moat, 10x growth for current investors is highly improbable. The absence of specific current financial data in the provided research does not negate its historically weak fundamentals.