The energy development funnel is broken. Over 75% of power projects fail before they ever reach detailed design - not because of bad technology, but because of a fragmented, consultant-heavy process that burns through millions before developers understand whether a site can actually be permitted, interconnected, or financed.
Today, bringing a power project online requires navigating dozens of disconnected consultants across siting, permitting, grid interconnection, engineering, and capital. Each stage operates in silos with its own data, its own documents, and its own failure modes: land brokers working from inconsistent criteria, environmental firms filing redundant paperwork across jurisdictions, utility queues stretching 3-5 years with opaque data, and investment bankers demanding non-standard diligence every time.
The result? Developers spend years and millions learning what should be knowable in weeks. Projects that could power data centers, industrial facilities, and critical infrastructure sit stalled, not in construction, but in process. Meanwhile, trillions in energy assets remain locked in permitting purgatory while demand accelerates.
Ixian Industries is building a unified platform that replaces the fragmented consultant-driven development process with an intelligent operating system. We aggregate data across siting, permitting, interconnection, and financing into a single source of truth, then layer AI workflows on top to automate repetitive tasks and flag risks before they kill projects.
Our approach combines three things most software companies lack: real transaction experience from energy M&A, hands-on project development from energy deployment, and active project engagements that pressure-test every feature we build. The result is software that actually fits how energy projects get done, not how consultants wish they worked.
We're focused on sub-100MW behind-the-meter systems because that's where demand is exploding (data centers, industrial facilities, crypto mining) and where the broken process hurts most. These projects are too small for big developers to care about but too complex for customers to navigate alone.