The world’s first live borehole feed from a rural area. Watch it live here.
The global carbon market is one of the largest financial markets in existence, yet it remains almost completely unknown to the general public. With an estimated value of more than 80 billion USD, it operates quietly in the background of major corporations, governments, and global industries.
The reason is simple. The profits generated within this market are immense.
For decades, carbon credits have primarily been used by large organizations such as airlines, manufacturers, and energy companies. While consumers focus on stocks, real estate, or crypto, this parallel market has grown steadily without ever becoming part of mainstream awareness. It is, without exaggeration, the largest unseen market the masses have never been shown. Crbcoin exists to open that market.
Crbcoin connects the global carbon credit market to blockchain technology and makes it accessible while showing exactly where real impact happens, live and in real time.
A carbon crypto with real projects you can see
Crbcoin is the first crypto directly linked to a carbon credit generating organization that allows people to follow real climate projects through live webcams. Instead of abstract promises or distant reports, you can see the impact as it unfolds.
Under the leadership of CEO Hilde Watty, Crbcoin is built around one clear belief. If something creates real value, people should be able to see it with their own eyes.
That belief led to the decision to install live webcams at project locations, bringing the carbon market out of spreadsheets and into everyday reality.
Why the first live project is a borehole in Senegal:
- The first live Crbcoin project is a borehole located in rural Senegal, approximately one to two hours from Dakar.
- This location was chosen with intention. Hilde Watty has strong personal ties with the local community, built through years of direct involvement. Trust, cooperation, and long term commitment made Senegal the natural place to begin.
- Through the live feed, viewers witness daily life exactly as it is. Children and mothers collect water every day, carrying heavy jerrycans across long distances. In many cases, children fetch water instead of attending school, not because education is unimportant, but because access to clean water is a daily priority.
How a borehole generates carbon credits
A borehole is more than a water source. It is also a carbon reducing infrastructure project. Before a borehole exists, communities often boil water using wood or charcoal. They travel long distances to fetch water and rely heavily on natural resources. This leads to deforestation and unnecessary carbon emissions.
Once a borehole is installed, clean drinking water becomes locally available. Water no longer needs to be boiled and wood consumption drops significantly. These measurable reductions in emissions are verified and converted into carbon credits.
To see exactly how this works in practice, you can watch our explanatory video here: Watch video.
How carbon credits are used in everyday life
Carbon credits generated by projects like boreholes are sold to organizations that need to offset emissions, including airlines.
When booking a flight ticket, you often see the option to offset your flight. When you choose this option, you purchase a carbon credit.
That carbon credit allows you to fly green, meaning the emissions from your flight are compensated elsewhere. In practice, this can mean supporting a borehole project in Senegal.
By offsetting your flight, you help provide clean drinking water, improve health conditions, and support education. One single decision can positively impact the lives of between 500 and 1,500 people.
Live transparency through webcams
Crbcoin takes transparency a step further by allowing people to follow projects live.
Through the webcams, viewers can observe daily water collection, see that boreholes are properly maintained, and witness respectful treatment of animals and the surrounding environment.
Over time, Crbcoin will install more webcams across additional projects, allowing people around the world to follow climate impact as it happens.
Follow the live webcam here
Why installing webcams takes time
Installing live webcams in rural areas is technically complex.
- Many project locations have no electricity;
- no fixed internet connection;
- limited mobile coverage;
- Unlimited data subscriptions are rare, and running a continuous live video feed requires custom energy solutions and reliable connectivity.
Crbcoin chooses to implement these systems carefully rather than rushing and compromising quality or reliability.
Visit the projects yourself
Transparency also means openness. If you would like to visit our projects in person, including the borehole in Senegal, you are welcome. The Crbcoin team is happy to receive visitors, guide them on site, and show exactly how the projects operate.
Bringing an unseen market into the open
The carbon market may be one of the world’s largest unseen markets, but that is changing.
Crbcoin brings together blockchain technology, verified carbon credits, and real world infrastructure into a single ecosystem. By combining measurable climate impact with live visibility, Crbcoin opens the door to a market that has existed for decades, now accessible to everyone.