
Soldera Case Basse
company
EAS Applied Research Grant
investor
By digitising fragmented renewable‑energy certificates, Soldera removes a key bottleneck in Europe’s clean‑energy financing and ESG reporting, accelerating capital flow to decarbonisation projects.
Europe’s energy transition has outpaced the digital tools that support it. Traditional Guarantees of Origin (GOs) are scattered across national registries, many still relying on fax, spreadsheets, or manual updates. Soldera’s AI‑powered layer ingests data from APIs, parses documents, and reconciles records, delivering a single, audit‑ready view of renewable certificates. This meta‑infrastructure eliminates the friction that has long slowed capital allocation, enabling faster price discovery and more liquid markets for renewable assets.
The commercial impact is immediate. In 2025 Soldera grew revenue tenfold to €1 million, driven by a 30% month‑on‑month client acquisition rate and a portfolio that now spans roughly 4,000 power plants and 500 corporate customers. Companies using the platform report up to 40% reductions in back‑office compliance costs, while producers see 10‑15% higher GO revenues and a 95% drop in administrative workload. The recent €1.6 million EAS Applied Research Grant will expand the AI engine, reinforcing the company’s ability to scale across the remaining fragmented registries.
Beyond the balance sheet, Soldera’s solution addresses a regulatory imperative. EU directives such as CSRD and Scope‑2/3 reporting demand transparent, verifiable renewable sourcing across borders. By providing a unified, automated compliance engine, Soldera not only simplifies reporting for multinationals but also accelerates the flow of financing to new renewable projects. With a lean team and ambitions of becoming a European infrastructure‑scale unicorn, the firm is poised to become the de‑facto backbone of the continent’s green‑energy market.
Renewable‑energy platform Soldera has secured €1.6 million in non‑dilutive funding from the EAS Applied Research Grant to expand its AI‑driven certificate management system. The grant will fund AI infrastructure upgrades and support rapid growth across Europe, following a €2.5 million equity raise in April 2025.
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