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Jeevan Climate’s 2026 Vision: An In-Depth Analysis of Scaling Direct Air Capture

Jeevan Climate Soln has charted a rapid trajectory from technological validation to ambitious commercial-scale deployment in the Direct Air Capture (DAC) sector. The journey began in 2024 with the successful conclusion of the Titan pilot project, which validated their core technology and catalyzed a crucial €6 million Series A funding round. This financial milestone enabled the announcement of the large-scale Sirona project. Looking ahead, 2025 is marked as a pivotal year for execution, focusing on securing strategic partnerships and commencing construction on Sirona. The company’s strategy culminates in 2026 with the planned deployment of Sirona, targeting an impressive 1 million tons of annual CO₂ removal. This progression highlights a clear, aggressive strategy to scale its innovative DAC solutions and establish a significant presence in the global climate technology market.

Table: Jeevan Climate Soln SWOT Analysis Between 2019 – 2026

SWOT Category 2019 – 2022 2023 – 2026 What Changed / Resolved / Validated
Strengths Early-stage R&D focus, foundational technology concepts, and a core technical founding team. Proven pilot project (Titan), secured €6 million Series A funding, a clear roadmap for large-scale deployment (Sirona), and demonstrated technological viability. The company’s core strength shifted from theoretical potential to validated technology with financial backing, de-risking the innovation and validating its commercial pathway.
Weaknesses Lack of operational-scale data, high dependency on seed funding, unproven technology in real-world conditions, limited brand recognition. High capital dependency for scaling beyond Sirona, significant operational and execution risks for a first-of-its-kind large-scale project, and reliance on a single core technology. Weaknesses evolved from R&D and validation uncertainty to the immense financial and logistical challenges of scaling, resolving the ‘if’ and introducing the ‘how’.
Opportunities Nascent but growing market for carbon removal, access to early-stage climate tech grants, potential for key academic partnerships. Access to large-scale project financing and corporate offtake agreements, government incentives for DAC, and establishing market leadership through first-mover advantage at scale. Opportunities matured from securing initial R&D support to capitalizing on established, large-scale commercial and regulatory mechanisms for carbon removal projects.
Threats Technological dead-ends, competition from other early-stage startups for limited grant funding, failure to prove the scientific concept. Aggressive competition from well-funded rivals, supply chain disruptions for large-scale construction, potential shifts in carbon market policies, and risk of failing to meet ambitious deployment targets. Threats transitioned from existential R&D and early funding risks to market-level competitive pressures and complex operational hurdles inherent in major infrastructure projects.


Erhan Eren

Erhan Eren is the CEO and Co-Founder of Enki, a commercial intelligence platform for emerging technologies and infrastructure projects, backed by Equinor, Techstars, and NVIDIA. He spent almost a decade in oil and gas, first at Baker Hughes leading market intelligence, strategy, and engineering teams, then at AI startup Maana, where he spearheaded commercial strategy to acquire net new accounts including Shell, SLB, and Saudi Aramco. It was across these roles, watching teams stitch together executive briefings from scattered PDFs and Google searches, that the idea for Enki was born. Erhan holds a BS in Aeronautical Engineering from Istanbul Technical University and an MS in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering from Illinois Institute of Technology. He has spent over 20 years at the intersection of energy, strategy, and technology, and built Enki to give professionals the clarity they need without the analyst-grade budget or timeline.

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