Outsmarting Microweather in 40 Countries, This Boston-based Weather Tech Startup is Encashing on The India OpportunityRatan Tata is among the early investors in Climacell, which was started by three Israelis

ByAashika Jain

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

ClimaCell, an American weather technology company started by three Israelis, is set to encash on the opportunity that lies in Asia, particularly India.

Entrepreneur Indiacaught up with one of the threefounder, Shimon Elkabetz, to know more about the company's India plans.

在一个双tion, CEO & Co-Founder Elkabetz explained how the company is creating data in the world that is useful in places where data is lacking or insufficient.

"What we did specifically in India over the last three years was looking at what we call weather of things (WoT), virtual sensors - things that are not supposed to sense the weather but we can use in order to create reliable weather data and so we started with cellular networks, told Entrepreneur India.

With 100 employees, the WoT company is aiming to repurpose wireless communication networks for advanced weather forecasting.

In their attempt to predict prediction accurately, the company is modeling work around WoT such that by reverse engineering to signal in the air to weather data, it can be predicted where and in which part it is raining in India.

"Now we can provide solutions to all kind of industries and sooner to the consumers," Elkabetz said on the sidelines of the OurCrowd 2019 Global Investor Summit where the company announced a global forecasting system over 35 cities in India to provide 24 to 48-hours alert with very high accuracy.

Customer Base

Elkabetz thinks companies in the airlines, agriculture space and specifically in the renewable and energy space in India can make for potential partners in due course in India.

该公司一直在寻找潜在的airlines partners in India. In the past, ClimaCell has worked with airlines such as JetBlue, Delta airline among others.

Having risen up to $68 million in Series B funding, ClimaCell is focused on products such as HyperCast weather software for web, tablet, and mobile, and the Microweather API.

First Mover Advantage

Besides being among the first players in India, Elkabetz also thinks ClimaCell's approach gives the company an edge over others peers.

"It's all about the data; the traditional approach is to come and install sensors and then maintain them. This is not scalable because if everything is software-based we can do it rapidly. That's how you can take the country from a low weather data to almost like in the US, without breaking the bank!," Elkabetz said.

He counts his second advantage to be the potential to turn those data points to reliable weather models – how you take this data and make it valuable is something very unique to us, he said.

Entrepreneur India's staff metShimon Elkabetzof ClimaCell as a part of their visit to Israel for the OurCrowd Global Investor Summit in March 2019.

Aashika Jain

Entrepreneur Staff

Former Associate Editor, Entrepreneur India

Journalist in the making since 2006! My fastest fingers have worked for India's business news channel CNBC-TV18, global news wire Thomson Reuters, the digital arm of India’s biggest newspaper The Economic Times and Entrepreneur India as the Digital Head.

Related Topics

领导

Fall Is a Stressful Time of the Year for Working Parents — Here's How Employers Can Help

Parents face a tough juggle when it comes to work and kids' school schedules. Empathetic employer policies can ease the stress — and benefit everyone.

Business News

Taylor Swift Reportedly Pays All Restaurant-Goers' Checks to Clear Out Restaurant For Her and NFL Star Travis Kelce

The star was spotted at Arrowhead Stadium for the Kansas City Chiefs game Sunday night alongside Kelce's mother.

Business News

'It's Getting Worse By the Week': Kevin O'Leary Issues Grave Warning About Commercial Real Estate Industry

The "Shark Tank" star spoke to impending devaluation of stocks in the industry on FOX Business' "Varney & Co."

Business News

'This Is Getting Outta Control': Disney+ Cracks Down on Password Sharing Outside of One Household

For Canadian customers, the streaming service is following Netflix's unpopular new policy.