Kinetic Seas Director Robert Jackson Resigns
The exit leaves the small, unlisted Colorado company without an announced successor on its board.
July 13, 2026

Robert Jackson has stepped down as a director of Kinetic Seas Incorporated, giving up all positions with the company effective July 8, 2026 — the same day he informed the board of his decision.
In his resignation letter, Jackson said he is leaving to pursue other business ventures and to avoid any potential conflicts of interest. The company disclosed no dispute or disagreement behind the move. The letter, provided as an exhibit, presents the decision as voluntary and contains no indication of friction over the company’s operations, policies, or accounting.
The board did not name a replacement, and the company offered no detail on how or whether it intends to fill the vacated seat.
A small, unlisted reporting company
Kinetic Seas is incorporated in Colorado and reports to the Securities and Exchange Commission, but it has no securities listed on any exchange and carries no trading symbol. It identifies itself as an emerging growth company, a status that affords smaller and newer registrants reduced reporting burdens. Its principal office is in Schaumburg, Illinois. Chief Executive Edward Honour signed the disclosure on the company’s behalf, dated July 10, 2026.
What the departure does and does not tell shareholders
For a reporting company of this profile, the departure of a single non-executive director to pursue outside interests is the kind of governance change that ordinarily draws little attention on its own, particularly where the stated reason is conflict avoidance rather than a disagreement with management. What such an exit signals depends heavily on context this disclosure does not provide, including:
- the director’s role and tenure on the board;
- the composition of the board he leaves behind; and
- whether the outside ventures he referenced overlap with the company’s own business.
Absent that context, the event stands as a straightforward, self-described voluntary resignation, with the underlying letter available for shareholders and counterparties who want the director’s own account of his reasons.