Qivna is an online marketplace for nature-based carbon assets. It aims to help landowners turn idle or sustainably managed land into “climate income.” The platform connects landowners with global carbon credit buyers, supports land listings and carbon credit potential estimates, and allows verified corporate buyers to contact project owners directly to discuss purchases.
Based on the information on the page, Qivna’s core modules include free land listings, a carbon revenue calculator, a project marketplace, and buyer inquiry connections. Landowners can submit details such as land area, location, and land type. The calculator estimates annual credits based on project type and area—for example, around 8 credits/ha/yr for reforestation, 5 for conservation, and 3 for soil carbon, while also showing categories such as wetland restoration and agroforestry. The platform also emphasizes that projects go through a review process to increase buyer confidence, but it does not specify whether it uses certification standards such as Verra or Gold Standard, nor does it disclose MRV, auditing, or long-term monitoring procedures.
Qivna clearly states “List Your Land — Free,” meaning land listing is free. The page shows sample carbon credit pricing, such as $15/credit, and uses a $12-$25/credit range with a median price of $18.50/credit in its revenue estimates. However, the platform does not disclose whether it charges commissions, charges buyers, or has project development or certification fees, so the true transaction costs remain unclear.
The main advantages are its simple workflow, which lowers the barrier for small and medium-sized landowners to understand and enter the carbon market; its intuitive revenue calculator, which is useful for quickly assessing project potential; and its marketplace-style listings, which help buyers discover projects. The limitations are that it lacks disclosure around capabilities commonly expected in enterprise software: there is no information on team permissions, APIs, third-party integrations, payment settlement, contract management, data security, or compliance. The page also contains both “0 Landowners” and “340+ landowners,” so the consistency of its data needs verification.
Qivna is better suited to landowners with forestland, farmland, wetlands, or degraded land, as well as companies, governments, or climate investors looking for nature-based carbon credit projects. Its accessibility from China is unknown; payment methods and cross-border settlement options are not disclosed. For users targeting China’s domestic carbon market or forestry carbon sink development, it should still be evaluated alongside local carbon asset management providers, forestry carbon project developers, and compliant trading channels.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on qivna.com official site.
qivna.com is an United States SaaS Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach qivna.com directly.