Earth Carers

Physical climate risk assessment platforms (mapping flood, heat, fire, and storm risk)

Problem areaPeople

Communities aren't ready for what's coming

9/13

Climate change isn't a distant threat — it's already reshaping where people can safely live and work. Communities worldwide are facing floods, heat waves, wildfires, and storms that are more intense and frequent than anything in living memory. Yet most places lack the tools, knowledge, or financial resources to prepare for what's coming next.

The gap between climate science and local action is enormous. Global climate models can tell us the planet is warming, but a city mayor needs to know which neighborhoods will flood, which roads will buckle in extreme heat, and how to protect residents who can't afford air conditioning. Without this kind of practical, local information, communities are flying blind into an increasingly dangerous future.

This isn't just about building sea walls or planting trees. It's about creating entirely new systems — for predicting risks, designing solutions, and paying for protection — that can keep pace with a rapidly changing climate.

Problem

Communities can't see the climate risks heading their way

1/5

Most communities are making critical decisions about housing, infrastructure, and economic development without understanding their future climate risks. They know the climate is changing, but they don't know how it will change in their specific location, or when those changes will hit.

Global climate models are too broad to be useful for local planning. A city needs to know which streets will flood in a 100-year storm, not just that sea levels are rising. A farmer needs to know how rainfall patterns will shift in their county, not just that droughts are becoming more common. This translation from global science to local action is where most communities get stuck.

Solution approach

Physical climate risk assessment platforms (mapping flood, heat, fire, and storm risk)

1/5

These platforms take global climate data and translate it into detailed, location-specific risk maps that communities can actually use. They show which areas are most vulnerable to flooding, extreme heat, wildfires, or severe storms, often down to individual buildings or city blocks.

The technology combines climate science, historical weather data, and local geography to create visual maps and risk scores that help planners, developers, and residents understand what they're facing. Instead of abstract warnings about climate change, communities get concrete information about which areas to avoid building in and which need immediate protection.

Companies