Corrently

Tracks electricity carbon intensity and solar forecasts to shift energy heavy workloads to the cleanest hours and logs emissions data for reporting.

Try Corrently in Ceven

Ask Ceven anything
Standard

Why use Ceven?

  1. AI native Corrently integration

    • Describe the outcome and Ceven picks the right Corrently calls, fills the parameters, and checks the result.
    • Structured, agent friendly tool schemas so each call runs reliably instead of by guesswork.
    • Rich coverage for reading, writing, and querying your Corrently data, across all 23 of its actions.
  2. Managed auth

    • Built in OAuth with automatic token refresh and rotation.
    • One place to manage, scope, and revoke Corrently access.
    • Per user and per environment credentials instead of shared keys.
  3. Agent optimized design

    • Actions are tuned from real success and error rates so reliability climbs over time.
    • Full execution logs so you always know what ran in Corrently, when, and on whose behalf.
    • The agent pauses and asks when Corrently is unclear instead of plowing ahead.
  4. Enterprise grade security

    • Fine grained access so you control which agents and people can reach Corrently.
    • Least privilege by default, read scopes first and only the writes a workflow needs.
    • A full audit trail of every Corrently action to support review and sign off.

Supported tools

Every action Ceven's agents can run on Corrently, and when to use it.

Update CO2 meter
Use this when sending new or updated electricity consumption readings to Corrently for emissions tracking.
Get PV generation forecast
Pull hourly solar energy production forecasts and loss estimates for a specific location to optimize scheduling.
Get current carbon intensity
Pull the real time CO2 emissions per kilowatt hour for a specific grid region.
Get carbon intensity forecast
Pull predicted carbon intensity levels for the next few days to plan energy heavy tasks.
List energy zones
Pull a list of all available energy regions and zones supported by the API.
Get grid mix
Pull the current percentage of renewables versus fossil fuels in a specific energy zone.
Search location coordinates
Query the system to find the correct energy zone based on latitude and longitude.
Create energy alert
Set a trigger for when carbon intensity drops below a specific threshold in a zone.
Get historical emissions
Pull past carbon intensity data for a specific date range to verify sustainability goals.
Update meter metadata
Change the configuration or labels for a specific CO2 meter instance.
Delete energy alert
Remove an existing carbon intensity trigger that is no longer needed.
Get regional pricing
Pull current electricity pricing data for a specific region to correlate cost with carbon.
CO₂ Meter Update
Tool to create or update a co₂ meter reading for emissions tracking. use when sending new or updated electricity consumption readings to corrently.
PV Generation Forecast
Tool to get solar energy production forecasts (hourly output and loss estimates) for a specific location. use when you need hourly pv generation data to optimize energy scheduling.

14 actions · scroll to see them all

Frequently asked questions

Ceven implements a smart queuing system that respects the specific rate limits of your Corrently plan. If the agent detects a 429 too many requests response, it automatically pauses the workflow and uses an exponential backoff strategy to retry the call. This ensures that your energy monitoring does not stop during critical grid shifts. For high frequency meter updates, we batch requests where the API allows to minimize the total number of calls. You can monitor your current quota usage within the Ceven integration dashboard to see if you need to upgrade your Corrently tier for more frequent data polling.
Ceven acts as the intelligence layer between Corrently and your hardware. While Corrently provides the data on carbon intensity, Ceven uses that data to trigger actions in other connected tools. For example, if Corrently reports a low carbon peak, Ceven can send a command to a smart plug via a separate integration or trigger a script in your cloud provider to start a VM. The workflow is: Corrently provides the signal, Ceven evaluates the signal against your rules, and then Ceven executes the command on your hardware or software infrastructure.
Ceven uses a heartbeat monitor to check the freshness of Corrently data. If the last updated timestamp on a carbon intensity reading is older than a specific threshold, the agent will mark the data as stale and trigger a fallback action. You can configure this fallback to either use the most recent forecast as a proxy or to pause all energy heavy workloads until a fresh real time reading is available. This prevents the system from making decisions based on outdated grid conditions which could lead to higher than expected emissions during a sudden grid shift.
The accuracy of the PV generation forecast depends on the granularity of the location data provided to Corrently. When using Ceven, we recommend providing exact latitude and longitude rather than just a city name to get the most precise hourly output estimates. Keep in mind that these are forecasts based on meteorological data and actual generation may vary due to local shading or panel efficiency. Ceven can help you reconcile this by comparing the forecast from Corrently against the actual meter readings you push back into the system.
Corrently focuses on regions with available transparency in grid data, with strong coverage in Europe and North America. If you attempt to query a zone that is not supported, Ceven will return a clear error indicating the region is unavailable. You can use the List energy zones action to see exactly which areas are currently covered. If your facility is in a gap region, you can set up a manual data entry workflow in Ceven to upload CSV files of grid data provided by your local utility provider.
Ceven does not store your primary energy consumption data long term. We treat Corrently as the system of record for your emissions. When a workflow runs, Ceven pulls the necessary data from Corrently, performs the calculation or trigger, and then clears the temporary state. If you need a permanent archive for regulatory compliance, we recommend setting up a Ceven workflow that periodically pulls data from Corrently and writes it into your own database or a spreadsheet tool like Google Sheets or Airtable for permanent storage.
Yes, Corrently imposes strict limitations on the free tier, specifically regarding the frequency of API calls and the depth of historical data available. Free users may find that the agent cannot poll real time data every minute without hitting limits. Additionally, certain advanced forecasting tools are gated behind paid subscriptions. If Ceven encounters a permission error indicating a feature is not available on your plan, the agent will notify you and suggest the specific upgrade path required to enable that functionality within your workflow.
Absolutely. You can create and manage as many CO2 meters as your Corrently plan allows. In Ceven, you can map different meter IDs to different assets in your organization. This allows you to run complex workflows such as comparing the carbon efficiency of two different warehouses in different energy zones. The agent can aggregate these readings into a single corporate dashboard or trigger individual alerts for each building based on its specific energy profile and local grid conditions.

Alternatives to Corrently

Other tools that solve a similar problem. Ceven supports these too, so you can switch or run more than one at once.

Electricity Maps logoElectricity MapsWattTime logoWattTimeClimatiq logoClimatiq

Try Ceven on your stack

Plug Ceven on top of the tools you already run. Connect Corrently and the rest of your stack, describe the outcome, and its agents handle the work end to end, days of it in minutes.

Get started for free