You need a number.
Not just a narrative.

Data does not become useful on its own. It takes a modeling layer refined for years to turn raw data into numbers your stakeholders will trust, and that you can defend when they push back.

Anatomy of a Forecast

Three layers of evidence. One defensible number.

Baseline Model

What emissions look like without this solution. You can't claim avoided impact without knowing what you're displacing, and most impact claims skip this step entirely.

GHG intensitiesEnergy mixesSector benchmarksIncumbent performance

Solution Model

What this specific solution actually changes. Not marketing claims. Engineering data, lifecycle analysis, and real performance curves that hold up under scrutiny.

Performance curvesEfficiency gainsLCA dataDeployment constraints

Market Model

How far and how fast this solution realistically scales. The gap between a science project and a climate solution is market adoption, where your commercial story and your impact story become the same story.

TAM / SAMAdoption curvesGeographic reachCompetitive dynamics

The Output

Investment-Grade Forecast

Avoided emissions in tonnes CO2e. Auditable provenance. Version-controlled. The kind of number that ends the "but how do you really measure impact?" conversation.

See a real forecast

Built for Your Scale

From seed stage to index scale.

Asset Owners

Capital allocation across hundreds of positions. Board-level reporting. Strategic planning. You need a coherent index of climate impact at institutional scale, not a patchwork.

10,000+forecasts

Fund Managers

Your LPs want consistent impact data across every holding. One methodology, not 20 different spreadsheets cobbled together at reporting time.

100sforecasts

Startups

You need one defensible impact number for your next raise. Not a consultant report. One forecast that survives investor due diligence and turns skepticism into confidence.

1forecast

Stop defending estimates.
Start presenting forecasts.

Pick a solution you care about. We'll walk you through a real forecast: every input, every assumption, every output. No hand-waving.