
ProScore introduced Version 2.0 of its compliance management platform at RE+ 2025, scheduled from September 8 to 11 in Las Vegas. The new release expands capabilities for real-time audit readiness and unified contractor oversight, giving developers and EPCs the transparency required to manage the complexities of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), reducing total operating cost (TOC) by up to 60 percent.
ProScore will represent how V2 compresses compliance reporting from months to minutes and validates prevailing wage classification on an intuitive-AI basis, as well as reports apprenticeship ratios across multi-tier contractors with fully integrated dashboards.
Executives will also meet with developers and investors, as well as insurers, to demonstrate how the platform strengthens project bankability by aligning compliance with ESG performance.
ProScore positively supports projects involving more than 40 percent of the U.S. utility-scale EPC market, such as some of the nation’s most complex renewable builds. One major developer recently cut its compliance turnaround from three months to just 24 hours, accelerating investor approval and moving a flagship project into construction ahead of schedule.
ProScore positions compliance as a driver of resilience rather than a bottleneck. Covering broad aspects from the jobsite to the boardroom, ProScore delivers the transparency along with the confidence needed to de-risk projects, protect credits, and accelerate clean energy growth.
ProScore operates on the industry standard for IRA compliance. Powered by NVIDIA GB200 superchips, the platform delivers an industry-low total operational cost, enhances data accuracy, and provides real-time reporting with unmatched speed and transparency.
Executive Statement
According to Ron Nickelson, founder of ProScore, ProScore was built for rapid deployment; their AI integration accelerates the support of utility-scale projects, substantially reducing ramp-up time. With V2, projects can anticipate risks, adapt in real time, and prove compliance the moment auditors or investors demand it. That transparency doesn’t just reduce risk, but it also protects billions of dollars in incentives.
