About
The public sector across the world, at local, national, and regional levels, is steering society towards tomorrow's low-carbon economies. To accelerate this transition, cross-pollination of knowledge, solutions and standards must be rolled out at scale.
At ClimateView, we are developing a comprehensive data structure,
platform, and framework, co-developed with hundreds of actors. Our collaborators include standardisation institutes, NGOs,
authorities and experts. This collective effort ensures that the
approach is systemic, IPCC-based, adaptable, and effective in
driving the climate action needed.
It started in 2018 when ClimateView embarked on its mission with
the rollout of our first project in collaboration with the Swedish
Climate Policy Council, the Swedish Environmental Protection
Agency, the Swedish Energy Agency, and Vattenfall. This initiative
evolved into Panorama - a roadmap to climate neutrality for
Sweden. The team - a mix of scientists, programmers and policy
specialists, who had all asked themselves the question of how to
make an impact - expanded the efforts, piloting a technology
platform with local authorities in Sweden, Germany, and the UK.
These early initiatives highlighted the necessity for new insights
tailored to cities and regions as well. The software platform came
to enable systematic and integrated modelling of political,
economic, and energy shifts across cities, regions, and nations.
This approach allowed for the management, modelling, and reporting of unified metrics based on IPCC mitigation options -something that the public sector needed.
By 2024, ClimateView is working with over 134 of the world's most
ambitious cities, regions and nations across Europe and North
America. We collaborate with capitals like Berlin and Glasgow, as
well as frontrunners, including Cincinnati, Bristol, Heidelberg
and many other EU Mission Cities. We partner with top-tier global
consultancies like Accenture to provide AI-powered advice. We
assist nations such as Sweden and Scotland, as well as regions and cohorts of local authorities, including the Ruhr Region, Europe's largest industrial area undergoing the green transition.