Daily Camera (Boulder)

Water analytics startup led by Boulderbas­ed Sphero co-founder raises $1M

- By Lucas High

Adam Wilson was looking for his next move.

The Sphero Inc. co-founder was getting antsy building robotics hardware and couldn’t stop thinking about the spotlight the Ear th’s climate crisis has shone on the issue of water resources.

“For the past few years, I really didn’t like the way the world was going in terms of the future of water, and I just decided I had to try to do something about it,” Wilson told Bizwest.

So, a couple of years ago, he put feelers out to his network of entreprene­urs. A former Sphero employee mentioned Javier Mar ti, a former European Space Agency engineer who’d developed a sensor that measures the reflection of GPS satellite signals from water on the surface of the earth and builds a spatial map of that water. Wilson was intrigued.

“When I learned that Adam from Sphero was interested, I was like, ‘Seriously?’’’ Marti said.

For Wilson’s part, “When I saw the device, it blew me away,” he said.

The pair joined forces in 2019, and Divirod Inc., as the company is currently constitute­d, was born.

The Boulder-based firm, which recently completed a $1-million fundraisin­g round, developed the water measuremen­t hardware, which is loaned out to clients such engineerin­g firms or municipal water management consultant­s, and uses a cloud-based platform to analyze data, which is then sold to those clients.

For example, the device can measure the snow on the roof of a large building and tell its owners when there might be risk of collapse, or it can analyze tidal changes and wave activities along the coastline to help communitie­s improve flood infrastruc­ture.

Marti is the CEO and heads up logistics and coding, while Wilson serves as head of product and leads manufactur­ing and business developmen­t ef for ts.

“Adam and I are fitting like a hand and a glove,” Marti said of the partnershi­p between the two Divirod executives.

The pair used the COVID-19 pandemic to build the Divirod team, which now totals seven members, and raise capital.

The recently closed $1-million round was led by investors Thin Line Capital and Idrica SPA.

“We are very interested in climate resilience, particular­ly with respect to droughts and floods. With that, we looked at several dozen water technology companies, many of them extremely interestin­g,” Thin Line Capital Managing Partner Aaron Fyke said in a statement. “Ultimately, we chose to support Divirod because it is providing the tools to allow decision makers, with billions of dollars of infrastruc­ture at risk, to navigate the very real effects of climate change that already exist today, and will grow in the future.”

Divirod plans to use its new capital to improve its hardware and to beef up its marketing ef for ts.

For now, the company is done raising money.

“This is the best part, now we can work again!” Wilson said.

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