Focus Areas

Land Use

Land holds carbon, water, and biological diversity that no engineered system can replicate. We work with the organizations tending it.

The most important climate infrastructure isn’t built — it’s grown, managed, and protected. Forests, grasslands, wetlands, and working agricultural land do work that no data center can: sequestering carbon, filtering water, sustaining the species that make ecosystems stable.

The organizations responsible for this land — conservation trusts, regenerative agriculture networks, tribal land managers, environmental land agencies — are often under-resourced relative to the scale of what they’re stewarding. We work to change the ratio.

Where We Work

Conservation Organizations

Land trusts and conservation nonprofits hold and manage millions of acres across the country. They need tools for monitoring, stewardship planning, donor reporting, and demonstrating impact in ways that satisfy increasingly quantitative funders. We build that infrastructure.

Regenerative Agriculture

Farmers transitioning to regenerative practices face a documentation burden — for carbon markets, for certifications, for grant compliance — that often falls on people who have more important things to do with their time. We design workflows that reduce that burden without reducing the integrity of what’s being documented.

Ecosystem Services and Carbon Markets

The market infrastructure for nature-based carbon is maturing, but the data layer underneath it is still fragile. We work with organizations building monitoring, reporting, and verification systems that can withstand scrutiny — because markets that can’t be trusted don’t serve the land they’re meant to protect.

Tribal and Indigenous-Led Land Management

Some of the most sophisticated and durable land stewardship in North America is led by tribal nations and indigenous-led organizations. We work in this space carefully and in genuine partnership — the technology follows the relationship, not the other way around.

A Note on Scale

Land use is inherently local. A watershed in the Cascades and a longleaf pine savanna in the Southeast have almost nothing in common ecologically, even if they’re both conservation properties. The tools we build need to honor that specificity — configurable enough to fit the actual landscape, not just the template.