Seqana’s €3.2M raise makes soil health a measurable climate asset
Seqana raised €3.2M to quantify soil health using satellite imagery and machine learning, helping companies and carbon-project developers measure soil carbon and regenerative agriculture outcomes.

Regenerative agriculture cannot scale on good intentions alone. It needs measurement. Seqana’s raise points to the data layer behind soil health and carbon projects.
What happened
Berlin-based Seqana raised €3.2M to quantify soil health using satellite imagery and machine learning.
The round was led by Pymwymic, with participation from existing investors HTGF and Counteract. Seqana works with food, fibre, fuel companies and carbon-project developers to measure soil carbon and broader soil-health indicators.
Why it matters
This is a strong climate and agritech infrastructure story.
Soil carbon and regenerative agriculture need credible measurement before they can become investable, auditable or scalable. Without reliable data, companies cannot prove whether soil-health programmes are actually working.
The bigger picture
Climate tech is increasingly about verification infrastructure.
Seqana is not selling a consumer sustainability product. It is selling the measurement layer that can help companies, project developers and investors understand whether nature-based climate work is delivering real outcomes.
