Telescope is a climate risk intelligence platform for real estate companies, banks, and insurers. We help you understand climate-related risks at the property level, take action on those risks, and meet regulatory requirements like the EU Taxonomy and CSRD.
You log in once at app.telescope.eco. Depending on what your organization has signed up for, you'll have access to one or both of Telescope's modules.
Two modules, one platform
Both modules are built on the same underlying data and methodology. The difference is the use case.
Voyager: assess, plan, and manage
Voyager is for real estate companies who need to understand their existing exposure, create plans to reduce it, and track progress.
Assessments
Voyager covers all three risk dimensions, each with its own dedicated dashboard:
Physical climate risk (CRVA): flooding, landslides, storm surge, and other natural hazards
Transition risk: energy performance, regulatory changes, and how market expectations affect your portfolio's long-term viability. Create transition plans and track where you stand.
Biodiversity and nature risk: exposure to protected areas, vulnerable habitats, and nature-related regulatory requirements
The climate risk assessment follows a structured four-step process. The first two steps (pre-screening and hazard exposure) are automated. In steps three and four, your team adds knowledge about your buildings to assess vulnerability and evaluate potential consequences. The result is a fully documented assessment that meets EU Taxonomy requirements.
Mitigation and tracking
Once risks are identified, Voyager recommends whether mitigation measures are needed based on the assessment results. You can then plan measures, assign them to team members, and track progress from planned to completed.
Portfolio overview
See how risk is distributed across your portfolio, where it's concentrated, and what the value at risk is based on property values.
Companies like Bane NOR Eiendom, Reitan Eiendom, Koteng Eiendom, Bertel O. Steen Eiendom, and Selvaag Eiendom use Voyager to manage climate risk across their portfolios.
Screening: assess at the point of decision
The Screening module is for banks, insurers, and real estate investors who need to evaluate climate risk property by property and monitor portfolio-level exposure.
Property screening
Enter an address and get the Telescope risk score (0 to 10) with detailed exposure levels for each natural hazard. The result is ready to use in a client meeting, credit memo, underwriting file, or investment report.
PDF download
Export screening results as a PDF to attach to credit files or share with colleagues.
Folders
Organize screened properties into folders to keep track of properties you're monitoring.
Portfolio analytics
At portfolio level, the Screening module shows how risk is distributed across your loan book, policy portfolio, or investment portfolio. The concentration risk view surfaces where climate risk is clustering, and you can filter to see properties above a risk threshold.
Who is Telescope for?
Property managers and asset managers at real estate companies who need to assess climate risk, create transition plans, and track mitigation measures across their portfolio
Sustainability managers responsible for CSRD and EU Taxonomy reporting who need structured, auditable assessments
Bank advisors and credit teams who assess collateral risk and need climate data as part of their lending process
Risk teams at banks and insurers who report on climate risk across portfolios for regulatory compliance (EBA, CSRD, PCAF)
Real estate investors who screen acquisition targets for climate risk during due diligence
Where does the data come from?
We use publicly available data from Norwegian and European authorities, combined with climate scenarios to show exposure under different conditions and time horizons. Sources include NVE, DSB, Kartverket, MET Norway, Copernicus Climate Change Service, and others. For a full list, see the data and methodology section of our help center.
Good to know
Telescope is currently focused on properties in Norway, with coverage expanding to other Northern European markets. The quality and availability of data varies between different hazards and regions depending on available mapping.
