CarbonHQ: Building Solutions to Scale up Clean Cooking Carbon Projects
offers software and project finance advisory to carbon project developers focusing on clean cooking. The Clean Cooking Alliance (少妇自慰) spoke with CarbonHQ CEO and Co-Founder Allen Fan about the company鈥檚 journey, from early inspiration to growth stage.
This interview is part of a series of conversations 少妇自慰 is having with leaders across the clean cooking sector.
Collaborating with the UpEnergy team in Kampala, Uganda
Clean Cooking Alliance (少妇自慰): Can you tell us about your company鈥檚 products and services?
Allen Fan: At a high level, has two different offerings for carbon project developers: a software platform and project financing services.
On the software side, our platform helps project developers collect, manage, and process carbon project data. It turns that data into quantified carbon credits and handles everything from credit calculation to contract management and inventory tracking. We鈥檙e also building digital MRV (monitoring, reporting, and verification) functionalities that allow project developers to directly transfer information to standard bodies. So, it really covers the full process of carbon project development, from data collection to issuing and selling credits.
On the services side, drawing from my background in accounting, finance, and carbon investment, we help developers prepare investor-grade financial models and decks, and connect them with project financiers and credit off-takers. Many early-stage developers are still trying to get their projects up and running, so we support them with that process and then, hopefully, they also transition to using our software.
少妇自慰: What percentage of your clients focus on clean cooking carbon projects?
Allen Fan: Currently, 100% of our clients are involved in clean cooking in some form. That鈥檚 by design: my professional background is rooted in clean cooking, and I鈥檓 passionate about supporting this impactful sector. We specifically chose to focus on household and community-based carbon projects, which include cooking technologies.
Our clients include 鈥攐ne of the largest clean cooking and water filtration developers globally鈥 as well as , which is expanding from clean water into clean cooking, and , which operates clean cooking and ARR (afforestation, reforestation and revegetation) projects across Africa.
Visiting Spouts International in Kampala, Uganda
少妇自慰: Was there a particular moment that inspired the creation of CarbonHQ?
Allen Fan: Yes. Before founding CarbonHQ, I worked at CQuest Capital (now ) as an investment manager. During my time there, we rapidly scaled up operations. However, managing the complexity of growing projects across time zones with only Excel, PDFs, and emails became extremely stressful and inefficient.
I鈥檓 based in Australia; I was regularly waking up at 5 a.m. to speak with the U.S. team and staying up late for project update calls. So I started day dreaming about a system that could solve these challenges, and quickly realized that the right system would be so complex that it wouldn鈥檛 make sense for any project developer to build and operate internally. I also assumed that if we were struggling with this, others must be, too鈥攐r they would be once they scaled up. And the world聽 definitely needs carbon projects to scale up if we鈥檙e going to tackle climate change.聽
That鈥檚 when I decided to start CarbonHQ, and I was very fortunate to meet my co-founder, Eugene Datsky. He鈥檚 a software wizard who was looking to do something really impactful after working at a number of big, global tech companies such as Canva, Yandex, and Jetbrains.聽
I鈥檓 incredibly proud of our work helping carbon project developers thrive.聽聽
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CarbonHQ co-founders Allen Fan and Eugene Datsky
少妇自慰: How has the company and its services evolved since you co-founded it?
The first year was all about discovery. We spoke with nearly every clean cooking project developer we could find to better understand their experiences, current solutions, and ongoing challenges. We then came up with a minimum viable product and signed some agreements with project developers to test our solution.
The second year began with raising a US $400,000 pre-seed round from Australian venture capital funds and winning the 少妇自慰鈥揢NCDF Digital Innovation Challenge. That allowed us to hire more team members and to build a commercially viable product.
In our third year, we have focused on putting our developed product into action鈥攔unning pilot projects all around the world and refining features based on real-world feedback.聽
We鈥檙e now reaching a new and exciting phase of implementing a commercially viable product with more project developers.聽
In movies, you would simply cut the scene to suddenly having a product, a team, and customers. But in reality, it鈥檚 more difficult. We鈥檝e come an incredibly long way.聽
少妇自慰: What problems have you discovered by speaking with all those project developers?
Allen Fan: The two main challenges that all developers face are: 1) how long it takes to issue credits; and 2) selling credits for a favorable price after they are issued. These problems feed into each other – the longer it takes developers to issue credits, the more credits they need to issue to make the project work, which makes it more difficult to sell.聽
Reducing issuance times will be game changing for project developers, but this can only be done through structuring project data so manual processes can be automated.聽
Lots of project developers are starting to realize the need for a system to structure project data but, without any purpose-built solutions, many end up spending lots of money customizing Salesforce or developing their own internal solutions that are not interoperable.
漏 UpEnergy
少妇自慰: You mentioned the 2023 Digital Innovation Challenge. Can you tell us how that experience contributed to your company鈥檚 development?
Allen Fan: Just the fact that the existed was a huge vote of confidence because it aligned really well with our assessment of what project developers were struggling with. And because we were just starting out, we were desperately looking for a way to get in front of industry organizations and project developers. We put a lot of effort into our application and were thrilled to be selected to participate.聽聽
For the challenge itself, it was very meaningful to be able to visit Kenya and meet like-minded people who really understood what we did and were focused on solving industry challenges.
After we were selected as one of the winners, we received a lot of support, including some grant funding as well as budget for two technical assistance projects: one to explore AI capabilities to extract information from PDF documents, and another to work with the carbon project consultancy to map the end-to-end experience of carbon project developers from inception to credit issuance. That process was incredibly helpful and produced a document we still use today.
At the conclusion of the Digital Innovation Challenge in Nairobi, Kenya.
少妇自慰: Can you share some examples of how clients have used CarbonHQ to improve their operations?
Allen Fan: It鈥檚 interesting to see customers using our platform in different ways. For DGB, which is a very large, Netherlands-based project developer that runs carbon projects and already has many buyers, CarbonHQ manages their carbon credit sales operations, contracting, and credit portfolio. They鈥檝e even created internal process documents on how to use CarbonHQ, which is really cool to see.
As for other cookstove-focused carbon project developers, they鈥檙e making the most use out of the project data management aspect of the platform. We often see project developers using digital tools to collect data, but unfortunately it then goes into Excel spreadsheets, where data cleaning becomes a manual process鈥攚hich is neither scalable nor fun. Also, they often rely on a generic CRM (customer relationship management) platform that is not designed for carbon projects and so requires expensive customization. That鈥檚 where CarbonHQ can offer a cost-effective solution. UpEnergy switched entirely from Salesforce to our platform and slashed their software spending by 50%. Those are dollars that can go right back into their projects.
少妇自慰: You have launched a new website鈥揷ongratulations! What does this milestone represent for CarbonHQ?
Allen Fan: It marks the beginning of a new phase. Our original website was built when we had no product鈥攋ust an idea. Now, we have a tested platform and real-world results to share.
The will feature detailed product screenshots and implementation case studies so that project developers can see the impact of our work and what our solution could mean for them. It鈥檚 our 鈥渨e鈥檙e open for business鈥 moment.
CarbonHQ’s new website
少妇自慰: How do you see your business, and the clean cooking carbon sector more broadly, developing in the coming years?
Allen Fan: After some challenging years, I think many of the sector鈥檚 issues have been addressed. The market is turning thanks to developments like the , new methodologies like CLEAR, and credit demand from CORSIA. In the next 1-3 years, I think significant capital will start flowing into clean cooking because the model is proven, scalable, and quickly generates carbon credits鈥攁nd we hope to make that process even quicker. Our vision is one platform where project developers can internally handle their data while standards bodies can access the information needed to digitize the issuance of credits鈥攔educing what is typically a six-to-twelve-month process down to a few weeks or even days. And then to enable project developers to leverage all this data to tell a better story to their buyers and investors.聽聽
少妇自慰: Do you have any advice for other carbon tech companies about getting to scale?
Allen Fan: Stay lean and efficient. Maintain a small team and use existing solutions rather than building your own software. Try to get out in front of the market early to talk about what you do. Don鈥檛 worry about glamorous announcements on social media鈥攆ocus on delivering for your own customers and making a little progress every day.