Earthmover Aims to Revolutionize Weather and Geospatial Data Storage

Lilu Anderson
Photo: Finoracle.net

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Contents
FinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewEarthmover’s Strategic Pivot to Weather and Geospatial DataFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market ViewRobust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial SetsSeed Funding and Early Customer AdoptionMaking Complex Data AccessibleFinOracleAI — Market View

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Earthmover’s Strategic Pivot to Weather and Geospatial Data

Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earth observation generates vast amounts of data, yet for Earthmover, a climate tech startup co-founded by Ryan Abernathey and Joe Hamman, success required a sharper focus. The company has pivoted to concentrate on weather—data that changes frequently and directly impacts daily life—rather than broader, slower-changing climate outputs. !-- wp:paragraph --> “Data that change frequently present more urgent use cases,” Abernathey explained. “This includes weather, fire incidents, and new observations that are continuously generated. Climate data, while important, tend to be more static, updating only every few years.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

Robust Data Architecture Built for Complex Geospatial Sets

Earthmover’s core product remains its sophisticated data structure, designed to handle extensive and intricate datasets. In geospatial terms, this is known as a raster; in artificial intelligence, a tensor; and in traditional programming, an array. On this foundation, the company has developed tools that enable clients to extract actionable insights efficiently. !-- wp:paragraph --> The platform leverages open-source software such as Xarray, Pangeo, and Icechunk, and is compatible with major cloud providers including Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft Azure, as well as on-premises servers. Both Abernathey and CTO Hamman have deep roots in the open-source community, having contributed significantly to Pangeo and Xarray projects. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Seed Funding and Early Customer Adoption

Earthmover recently secured $7.2 million in a seed funding round led by Lowercarbon Capital, with participation from Costanoa Ventures and Preston-Werner Ventures. This capital injection will support the development of new tools atop its data storage platform. !-- wp:paragraph --> The startup has already onboarded more than ten paying customers, including the insurance startup Kettle, which utilizes Earthmover’s platform for wildfire risk assessment, and RWE, a German multinational energy company. Renewable energy firms rely on Earthmover’s capabilities to forecast supply and demand, mitigating weather-related risks. !-- wp:paragraph --> Earthmover’s open-source approach also addresses business continuity concerns. Abernathey emphasized that by building on open-source tools, customers retain control over their data even if Earthmover’s business trajectory changes, reducing dependency risks inherent in startup partnerships. !-- wp:paragraph -->

Making Complex Data Accessible

Earthmover aims to democratize access to weather and geospatial data. CTO Joe Hamman highlighted the importance of user-friendly interfaces, stating, “If you’re a trading desk, you want to see the latest forecast on a dashboard—not run a complex Python script.” !-- wp:paragraph -->

FinOracleAI — Market View

Earthmover’s pivot to weather and geospatial data capitalizes on the growing demand for real-time, actionable climate intelligence. Its open-source foundation and compatibility with major cloud platforms position it well to scale within the climate tech ecosystem. !-- wp:paragraph -->
  • Opportunities: Increasing need for dynamic weather data in insurance, energy, and trading sectors; growing adoption of open-source solutions; potential to expand customer base with scalable tools.
  • Risks: Competitive market with established weather data providers; reliance on continuous innovation to maintain differentiation; potential challenges in scaling enterprise adoption.
Impact: Earthmover’s strategic focus on frequently updating weather data and its open-source infrastructure reduces customer risk and fosters wider adoption, signaling positive momentum in the climate tech data market. !-- wp:paragraph -->
Share This Article
Lilu Anderson is a technology writer and analyst with over 12 years of experience in the tech industry. A graduate of Stanford University with a degree in Computer Science, Lilu specializes in emerging technologies, software development, and cybersecurity. Her work has been published in renowned tech publications such as Wired, TechCrunch, and Ars Technica. Lilu’s articles are known for their detailed research, clear articulation, and insightful analysis, making them valuable to readers seeking reliable and up-to-date information on technology trends. She actively stays abreast of the latest advancements and regularly participates in industry conferences and tech meetups. With a strong reputation for expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness, Lilu Anderson continues to deliver high-quality content that helps readers understand and navigate the fast-paced world of technology.