Carbon is priced. Systems are not.
Most tools isolate one outcome while leaving water, biodiversity, resilience, and true operating performance off the balance sheet.
The problem
A single farm can filter millions of gallons of water, sequester tons of carbon, and support hundreds of species. But there is no system that measures it, no market that prices it, and no financial product that rewards it.
The result? Farmers bear the cost of stewardship while markets capture the benefits. Land health declines. Communities lose resilience. And trillions in ecosystem value stay off every balance sheet.
“FAO estimated at least $10 trillion a year in hidden agrifood costs. The valuation layer to address this does not exist yet. That is what we are building.”
TerraValue founding thesis
Most tools isolate one outcome while leaving water, biodiversity, resilience, and true operating performance off the balance sheet.
Agriculture uses 70% of freshwater globally, yet no platform measures both water quality impact and quantity efficiency as a unified, finance-ready signal.
The science is advancing, but field-level and cross-region datasets remain inconsistent, making it harder to compare outcomes with confidence.
The valuation layer is missing because the data, methods, and incentives are not yet harmonized into one usable operating system.
What we’re building
Six integrated layers — including both water quality and water quantity. Each one solves a piece of the problem that no existing tool touches. Click any card to see real data.
“The land is already doing the work. We just need to see it.”
Why TerraValue
Most ag-climate tools measure one thing. TerraValue measures six — giving farmers and investors a complete picture of what the land actually produces.
Carbon-only platforms
Measure soil carbon in isolation. Miss water, biodiversity, and resilience entirely.
MRV-only tools
Verify a single credit type but do not value the full ecosystem or support farm decisions.
Precision ag tools
Optimize inputs and yield but ignore the natural capital value farms generate.
Six integrated dimensions
Soil carbon, water quality, water quantity, biodiversity, yield resilience, and economics — in one platform.
Dollar-denominated value
Translates ecosystem performance into real financial estimates farmers and investors can act on.
Decision-ready, not just report-ready
Compare scenarios, identify highest-value pathways, and unlock stacked revenue streams.
Farmer-first design
Built for the people who manage the land — not just the buyers who benefit from it.
Join the waitlist — be first to see your farm's full value.
Why we do this
TerraValue is building intelligence for the farmers, communities, and ecosystems that agriculture already holds together — so that stewardship becomes an economic strength, not a hidden cost.
Turn stewardship into evidence, confidence, and new economic leverage.
Support stronger local water, food, and land systems through better intelligence.
Translate living-system health into signals that markets and institutions can finally act on.
$4.49T
global agriculture, forestry, and fishing value added in 2024
16.5 Gt
agrifood system emissions in 2023
70%
of global freshwater withdrawals are tied to agriculture
$571B/yr
nature-based solutions investment needed by 2030
The opportunity
Carbon credits, water trading, biodiversity contracts, regenerative finance — the markets are forming, but the measurement and valuation layer is missing. That is what TerraValue builds.
$9.7B
The carbon credit market for agriculture, forestry, and land use is projected to reach $26.35 billion by 2030, growing at 28.5% CAGR — yet soil carbon credits remain under-verified and under-traded.
$20.7B
Growing at 14.5% CAGR driven by corporate net-zero pledges, climate-smart policy, and rising demand for practices that restore soil health and biodiversity.
< 2%
US farmland generates an estimated $125 billion+ in annual ecosystem services, but less than 2% is captured through carbon or environmental markets. The infrastructure to unlock the other 98% does not yet exist.
$23B
Water quality and nutrient credit trading is growing at 9.8% CAGR. Agriculture — the largest water user on earth — is only beginning to participate in these markets.
Independent research
FAO estimated at least $10 trillion a year in hidden agrifood costs and made the case for true cost accounting as a better decision framework.
FAO SOFA 2023FAO notes that lack of robust low-cost data and method harmonization are among the main barriers to scaling true cost accounting in agrifood systems.
FAO Agrifood Economics Working Paper 23-11npj Sustainable Agriculture notes that FAO recorded 449 digital agriculture initiatives worldwide as of January 2025, but adoption and data quality remain uneven.
npj Sustainable Agriculture, February 2026IEA projects global electricity consumption from data centers will roughly double to 945 TWh by 2030, increasing pressure on the physical systems that support compute growth.
IEA Energy and AI, April 2025Companies retired more credits in H1 2025 than any previous period, and $10 billion was committed to new credit generation — 3x 2024 levels. But agriculture-specific credits remain under-verified.
Carbon Direct, 2026The Ogallala Aquifer — irrigating 30% of US cropland — is declining in many regions with no replenishment timeline. Water quantity intelligence is becoming as critical as water quality measurement.
USGS Water ResourcesStart the conversation
This is an open door for investors, pilot partners, and collaborators who want to help define the missing market infrastructure.