US-based EDMA gives small producers a seat at the big table: smart meters mint auditable energy receipts (ETTs), $EDM settles the trade, and 30 million rooftops can finally sell into the international carbon market. Built by PrimeHire (500 engineers, global top 1%) audited by Cyberscope and Coinsult with zero critical vulnerabilities. 14,000 holders. $1.73M raised. Zero ads.
A Tuesday afternoon. A modest meter clicks past 10 kWh. No paperwork, no phone calls. A phone buzzes.
Tokens land.
Across the ocean, a sustainability lead opens a dashboard. Clean energy. Time-stamped. Tied to a real rooftop. One click—and that tiny home sale rolls up into a provable, international carbon transaction. They’ll never meet. The market just did.
This is EDMA. Not another PDF, not another promise—a rail that lets the long tail earn like a powerhouse. The model is flipping for the first time in generations: from big to small, from fenced parks to every roof with a patch of sun.
For months, the founder chased the respectable play: buy a solar park, wrestle permits, scale slowly. Then the insight hit. The future wasn’t a fence around a field. The future was every roof. He didn’t need to own a park. He needed a way for a million small parks to earn like one big one.
How the rail works (and why it feels inevitable)
When a connected meter crosses a threshold (say, 10 kWh), EDMA mints an ETT — Energy Tracking Token. Think of it as a public, auditable receipt for clean energy—who produced it, when, and how much. Inside EDMA’s marketplace, those receipts become value buyers already understand: renewable certificates and verified clean-energy purchases where rules allow.
There’s one rule that keeps the system honest: no $EDM, no conversion. $EDM is the settlement currency that turns proof into profit. More rooftops → more ETTs → more demand for $EDM. Inputs are physical. Settlement is digital. That’s the loop.
The market was waiting for this rail
The world is short of verified clean energy. The voluntary carbon market is swelling, yet auditable supply lags demand. Verified renewable supply is short by more than 30%, forcing corporations to pay premiums for receipts they can defend to auditors and regulators. EDMA doesn’t decorate spreadsheets—it mints meter-based receipts and makes them liquid.
And the scale hiding in plain sight? ~30 million homes already run rooftop solar. Put EDMA’s rail under that long tail and you open a pathway for tens of millions of families to earn in the international carbon market—now, not “someday”.
Built like infrastructure (because it is)
EDMA is US-based and developed by PrimeHire—500 engineers in the global top 1%. That means industrial-grade plumbing: security, auditability, throughput, uptime. Contracts have been independently audited (Cyberscope & Coinsult).
The stack anchors on Ethereum and scales on Base—credibility where it counts, efficiency where it matters.
Proof over promises—and traction without hype spend
With $0 in paid advertising, the presale already counts 14,000 holders and $1,730,000 committed. People hear it once, they get it, they act—because the logic is short enough to remember:
sun → meter → receipt → market, and $EDM settles the trade.
Token design that rewards adoption
- Fixed supply: 500,000,000 $EDM
- Target supply: 100,000,000 $EDM
- Every ETT conversion: 1% burn of the $EDM used + 1% to stakers
- Effect: as the grid goes peer-to-peer and receipts fly, circulating $EDM is designed to tighten. Adoption doesn’t just add energy; it adds scarcity. As supply decreases and the household community connects, demand concentrates.
30,000,000 wallets competing for 100 million $EDM.
Why now (the window that doesn’t stay open)
- Now: $EDM = $0.099
- Next stage: $0.18
- Target listing: $0.50
- No VC allocations—by design, the upside sits with the network that makes this real.
Close your eyes and run the scene forward. A thousand little meters tick past 10 kWh; a thousand receipts mint; a thousand buyers settle; a thousand families earn. Repeat that across 30 million rooftops and the grid doesn’t just get greener—it gets owned by the people who live under it.
What if this is the new playbook—the new thing—in energy and blockchain? What if the next great infrastructure isn’t built by owning more assets, but by coordinating the ones we already have?
Own the ride? Cute. Own the rail.
Presale is live at edma.app. Sunlight becomes income. The grid becomes all of us.