Real-time project monitoring using satellite and sensors (ensuring permanence of removals)
The money is flowing in the wrong direction
The global financial system is fundamentally misaligned with climate goals. Trillions of dollars continue flowing toward fossil fuel projects and unsustainable practices, while clean energy and climate solutions struggle to access the capital they desperately need.
This isn't just about having enough money — it's about redirecting existing capital flows. Pension funds, banks, and investors manage over $400 trillion globally, but most of this wealth still supports the old economy. Meanwhile, developing countries face impossible borrowing costs for solar farms, and promising carbon removal technologies can't scale without patient capital.
The consequences compound daily. Every coal plant that gets financed instead of a wind farm, every loan that ignores flood risk, every greenwashed investment that crowds out genuine climate action — these financial decisions shape our physical future.
Carbon markets don't reliably deliver real emissions reductions
Carbon offset markets are plagued by projects that don't deliver promised reductions, forests that get cut down after being protected, and credits that get sold multiple times. This undermines trust and lets companies claim climate progress without real action.
The stakes are enormous. If carbon markets work properly, they can channel billions toward genuine climate solutions. If they remain broken, they become a dangerous distraction from the urgent work of decarbonization.
Real-time project monitoring using satellite and sensors (ensuring permanence of removals)
Continuous monitoring systems that use satellite imagery, IoT sensors, and remote sensing to track carbon projects in real-time, detecting any reversals or failures immediately rather than waiting for periodic site visits.