Atlas is a regulatory intelligence platform for O&G. 21,200+ Colorado facilities, 254 operators, and 1.1M+ Texas wells: cross-linked, searchable, and benchmarkable in one map.
Colorado. Texas. Oklahoma. Three states of public O&G data, fragmented across agency portals with inconsistent site IDs and different publication schedules. In Colorado, click any facility and see its full regulatory profile: emissions, equipment inventory, enforcement history, and gas analysis. In Texas, explore 1.1M+ wells with production history and pipeline data. In Oklahoma, 455,000+ wells with injection records and earthquake data. All on one map.
You filed your ONGAEIR report. But you have no idea if your numbers are normal. Your competitors' filings are public. CDPHE has them. Your investors have them. You cannot easily read theirs.
The problem is not access. It is structure. Every facility's emissions data is public, but scattered across state portals in formats that do not talk to each other. To benchmark a single equipment category against your peers in Weld County takes hours of manual downloads. By the time you finish, the data has changed.
There is one question most Colorado compliance managers cannot answer without Atlas: are the emissions I reported for tank batteries, pneumatic controllers, or compressors consistent with what similar operators file for the same equipment type in my basin? If your numbers are high outliers, CDPHE will notice before you do. If they are low outliers, you may be a target for audit.
Commercial data platforms were built for production and deal intelligence. Their ONGAEIR emissions coverage is thin: permit summaries, not equipment-level breakdowns. They do not flag your DQ outliers or show you where you rank among your peers. Atlas was built for exactly this gap.
Colorado's CDPHE now requires operators to multiply their compiled methane inventories by 2.2x to 2.7x before submitting ONGAEIR reports. The requirement follows a $3.25 million aerial measurement campaign led by Colorado State University researchers in collaboration with Colorado School of Mines, which confirmed that factor-based inventories undercount actual facility methane by more than half. For operators with 2025 inventory reports due June 30, 2026, the question is no longer whether your numbers are low. It is how much lower than measured emissions your submission will appear. Atlas's peer benchmarking and DQ flag layer show exactly where your facilities stand relative to the 254 other Colorado operators submitting under the same requirement.
Atlas takes fragmented public agency filings from ECMC, ONGAEIR, RRC Texas, and OCC Oklahoma. It cross-links them, resolves duplicate site records, and surfaces the result in an interactive map with analytical tools built in.
In Colorado, the same tank battery appears in ONGAEIR with an emissions ID and in ECMC with a different facility number. In Texas, a single operator's wells, production history, inspections, and pipeline records all live in separate RRC datasets with separate identifiers. Connecting everything that describes one physical site is a manual job most platforms have never done.
Pull up any tank battery or facility and compare its emissions from 2021 through 2024. Spot whether an operator's methane intensity went up or down, check how a competitor's numbers shifted, or see if an enforcement action made a difference. Every year of ONGAEIR data, lined up and ready to compare.
Atlas adds what no agency portal provides: Data Quality anomaly flags that surface facilities whose reported emissions are statistical outliers vs. peers reporting similar equipment in the same basin, before an inspector notices. Peer percentile rankings for every operator. Equipment-category benchmarks. And for Colorado: gas isotope classification and basin-wide chromatography data.
Click any facility on the map. See its full regulatory profile: emissions filings, equipment inventory, production history, enforcement actions, NOAVs, spill records, gas and water chemistry analysis, and methane and ethane trends. All in a single panel. No spreadsheet downloads. No API configuration.
Every record in Atlas originated from ONGAEIR, ECMC, RRC Texas, or OCC Oklahoma, the same filings the agency has on file. Every fact is traceable to its source document. Data flows one direction: from agencies to Atlas to you. No proprietary operator data. No model estimates.
ONGAEIR, ECMC, RRC, and OCC each use different ID formats, filing structures, and update schedules. Atlas reconciles them into a single facility profile so you can see emissions, enforcement, production, and inspections in one place without manually matching records across portals.
TetraSoft's founders are former Research Scientists from METEC, the Methane Emissions Technology Evaluation Center at Colorado State University. They spent years measuring emissions at facilities across the country and studying how regulatory data reflects what is actually happening in the field. Atlas is built from that knowledge: a platform that makes four states of public O&G filings legible, searchable, and useful for the operators and analysts who work with them every day.
ECMC enforcement actions (NOAVs) are updated within 48–72 hours of agency publication. ONGAEIR inventory data is refreshed at each annual release cycle. Every record displays its last-refresh timestamp so you know the currency of the data you're working with.
| Established competitors | Atlas | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Annual contract | $99–$499/mo |
| ONGAEIR depth | Permit summary | Equipment-level + DQ flags |
| Contract | 12–24 month lock-in | Cancel anytime |
| Time to first insight | Days of onboarding | Minutes from signup |
| Emissions-first design | Add-on module | Core product |
"Know what ECMC sees about your sites before they call you."
Atlas's DQ anomaly flags surface facilities whose reported emissions are statistical outliers vs. peers reporting similar equipment in the same basin. One proactively corrected outlier can prevent an NOAV fine that exceeds years of Atlas subscription cost.
See whether the numbers you filed for tank batteries, pneumatic controllers, or compressors are consistent with what other Colorado operators in your basin report for the same equipment type. No other tool provides this cross-operator equipment-category check.
Your complete facility fleet: emission rates, equipment inventory, open enforcement items, and NOAV history. Pulled directly from ECMC and ONGAEIR, updated at each agency release. No spreadsheet assembly.
See your emission rates ranked against the 254 unique operators in Colorado, filtered to Weld County, Garfield County, or any sub-basin. Justify audit prioritization decisions to leadership with data, not intuition.
Compare your reported gas compositions against basin-wide chromatography data from other Colorado operators. Isotope classification, extended species, and Bradenhead pressures available for offset wells. Colorado-specific feature.
"Complete regulatory profile on any Colorado or Texas operator before you sign."
Pull the full regulatory profile of any target operator: NOAVs, spill history, emission rates, enforcement actions, and equipment inventory across all facilities. Export to a deal memo in one click. No manual portal research.
Rank any operator's facility-level methane intensity against every other operator in the same basin and equipment tier. See whether your target is a top-quartile or bottom-quartile performer before you underwrite.
After you close, Atlas alerts you when any portfolio company receives a new NOAV or triggers a DQ anomaly flag. No more learning about enforcement events from the news.
Atlas's facility-level data is sourced directly from ONGAEIR and RRC, the same records regulators and auditors rely on. Every emission figure is traceable to its source filing. That provenance is what LP questionnaires increasingly require.
Multi-state operators, deals spanning both basins, and cross-state peer comparisons. All in one platform without stitching together separate portal downloads.
"Your methane intensity, ranked against every peer in your basin."
Equipment-category breakdowns for every facility: tank batteries, pneumatic devices, compressors, flares. Not just corporate totals. The granularity required for OGMP 2.0 preparation and investor-grade ESG disclosure.
See where your operator stands vs. producers of similar scale and equipment configuration in the same basin. Production-normalized intensity comparisons that answer LP and NGO questions before they ask them.
Atlas cross-links emissions data to production volumes over time, enabling production-normalized methane intensity trends, an increasingly standard metric for ESG reporting and OGMP 2.0 readiness assessment.
Basin-level chromatography data for methane and ethane composition analysis across operators, useful for upstream methane intensity accounting and supply-chain emissions disclosure.
Building a Measurement-Informed Inventory for OGMP 2.0 Level 4/5 requires a clean, structured regulatory data baseline. Atlas provides that baseline. For the physics-based simulation layer, Atlas works alongside TetraSoft MAES.
Three plans, from individual analysts to large operator teams. 7-day free trial on all paid plans. Cancel before day 7 to pay nothing.
Atlas is updated monthly for all states. ONGAEIR, ECMC, RRC, and OCC data are all pulled on a monthly cadence.
No. Atlas is a read-only intelligence layer built entirely from public regulatory agency filings. Data flows one direction: from ONGAEIR, ECMC, RRC Texas, and OCC Oklahoma to Atlas, then to you. No proprietary operator data is uploaded. No confidential records are stored. This typically removes IT security review escalation for publicly sourced data platforms.
Atlas provides the structured, agency-sourced regulatory data baseline that OGMP 2.0 preparation starts with: emissions data, equipment inventory, production history, and peer benchmarks, all cross-linked and traceable to source filings. For the physics-based simulation and Measurement-Informed Inventory pathway, Atlas works alongside TetraSoft MAES. Atlas is the data intelligence layer; MAES is the simulation layer.
Enterprise platforms built for production and commercial intelligence typically carry limited ONGAEIR emissions depth: permit summaries and basic inspection records, not equipment-level emission breakdowns or cross-operator DQ anomaly flags. Most compliance teams that use both use the enterprise platform for commercial and production workflows and Atlas for regulatory exposure, ONGAEIR peer benchmarking, and emissions-first analysis. They answer different questions.
Colorado, Texas, and Oklahoma are live today. Colorado provides ONGAEIR emissions, ECMC well and permit records, gas chromatography, water chemistry, GHGRP, and enforcement history. Texas provides RRC wells, production, pipeline GIS, inspections, and violations. Oklahoma provides OCC wells, production, injection records, and earthquake data. Additional states are on the roadmap.
Yes. All plans include a 7-day free trial. Full facility detail panels, DQ anomaly flags, peer percentile rankings, and gas analysis tabs are available from day one. The trial starts when you sign up. You have 7 days to cancel at no charge. Plans start at $99/month.
Free to explore. 7-day trial. Cancel anytime.
Questions? Talk to the team.