Aisix Solutions Inc. (AISX:TSX.V; AISXF:OTCQB; QT7: FSE), a provider of climate risk assessment and modeling solutions, announced on April 30 that it signed a strategic data licensing agreement with RedZone Software LLC, a U.S.-based company specializing in wildfire and natural disaster risk modeling. The agreement, signed on April 21, is designed to expand AISIX’s market presence across North America’s climate intelligence sector. Under the terms, AISIX will supply RedZone with proprietary climate risk datasets, including burn probability and fire intensity data for Alberta and British Columbia. This data will feed into RedZone’s fire risk analytics platform to generate insights for enterprise and government clients across Canada.
“This agreement is a strong validation of the commercial value and quality of AISIX’s data assets,” said Mihalis Belantis, CEO of AISIX Solutions, in the company’s news release. He noted that RedZone’s integration of AISIX’s data opens doors to new customer segments and supports the company’s strategy to grow recurring, high-margin licensing revenues. RedZone’s CEO, Clark Woodward, added, “AISIX’s data is a critical layer that enhances our modeling capabilities,” allowing RedZone to deliver more detailed risk intelligence to clients.
The agreement includes provisions for potential geographic and product line expansion, which could increase AISIX’s addressable market. The deal strengthens AISIX’s positioning as a data provider for platforms used in climate resilience planning and risk-informed decision-making. AISIX’s broader product portfolio includes wildfire, extreme heat, wind, precipitation, hail, and drought assessments, using AI-powered analytics to support insurers, governments, and businesses. According to the company’s investor materials, its wildfire probability models have predicted Canadian wildfires with over 90% accuracy, providing a robust foundation for risk analysis in a growing market.
Delving Into Climate Risk Data and Intelligence
On March 7, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) launched the iClimateAction project in partnership with the Global Climate Observing System, the Group on Earth Observations, and the European Commission. According to the WMO, the initiative aimed to address fragmentation in climate data collection and accessibility by standardizing Essential Climate Variables and improving interoperability across observation networks. The WMO emphasized that this effort would help transform climate intelligence into actionable strategies, supporting initiatives such as the Global Heat Resilience Service and Global Ecosystems Atlas. The project coincided with the WMO’s 75th anniversary, highlighting the organization’s commitment to “science-driven innovation and stronger collaborations for a sustainable future.”
According to an April 24 article by Peoples World, recent shifts in U.S. national security assessments have sparked concerns among experts about the omission of climate change as a major security threat. Sen. Angus King questioned why the 2025 Annual Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community left out climate change after consistently including it for over a decade. The article noted that previous assessments had warned that “climate hazards such as extreme weather, higher temperatures, droughts, floods, wildfires, storms, sea level rise, soil degradation, and acidifying oceans are intensifying, threatening infrastructure, health, and water and food security.” Sherri Goodman, former deputy undersecretary of defense, stated, “Temperatures keep getting hotter, fire is more intense, sea level rise—all the indicators of climate [change] continue to shine red, and if we ignore it, then we do so at America’s peril.”
An April 26 report from SciTech Daily highlighted research from the University of Texas at Austin that examined how climate risk assessments often overlook key vulnerabilities by focusing too narrowly on individual risk factors. According to the study, traditional models have struggled to account for the complex ways environmental variables interact, underscoring the need for more advanced and integrated climate risk modeling. The research team used a two-factor system to map climate types globally, combining measures like temperature variability and precipitation unpredictability, and showed that capturing this complexity is critical for accurate risk assessment. The study emphasized that “the usual way of assessing risk... misses the complexity of underlying patterns and contradictions,” pointing to a broader sector-wide challenge in improving the precision and relevance of climate data for decision-making.
Upcoming Growth Drivers: AISIX’s Strategic Roadmap
AISIX Solutions’ investor presentation highlights a roadmap focused on expanding both product offerings and client reach. The company’s Climate Genius platform, currently under development, is intended to further strengthen its predictive climate risk capabilities, adding new tools such as extreme wind and smoke modeling for U.S. markets. AISIX serves a range of industries including insurance, government, real estate, and risk management, providing application programming interface (API) access, geospatial outputs, and predictive metrics that help organizations assess and mitigate environmental threats.
AISIX has built strategic relationships with firms such as MNP, a major Canadian professional services company, and ClimateDoor, a business development firm focused on climate growth strategies. These partnerships position AISIX to access new business channels and scale its solutions. The company’s capital structure includes 113,624,703 basic shares outstanding and 123,974,703 fully diluted shares, with funding from various private placements between 2019 and 2024. As climate risks escalate globally, with over US$320 billion in economic losses from climate disasters reported in 2024 alone, AISIX aims to meet the rising demand for accurate, auditable climate risk data. The company’s leadership, combining expertise in geoscience, AI, and risk management, is focused on advancing solutions that help clients navigate the complexities of climate resilience.
Ownership and Share Structure
Streetwise Ownership Overview*
Aisix Solutions Inc. (AISX:TSX.V; AISXF:OTCQB;QT7: FSE)
As for the ownership of Aisix, according to Refinitiv, two insiders hold 14.25% of the company. They are CEO and Director Belantis with 13.03% and Cofounder and Advisor David Poole with 1.22%.
Retail investors own the remaining shares as there are no institutional owners.
In terms of structure, Aisix has 113.62 Million shares outstanding and 80.67 million free-float traded shares.
The firm's market cap is CA$3.409 million, and it trades in a 52-week range of CA$0.015 and CA$0.07 per share. [NLINSET]
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