About this collection
Pitch decks for climate-tech founders — emissions math, IRA and policy framing, and the science-to-scale narrative built in. Each entry below has been hand-picked from the wider DeckForge AI library on the basis of structural strength, design discipline, and practical utility for a real business meeting. Every template in the collection is free for personal and commercial use, ships in both Google Slides and PowerPoint formats, and is built on a master grid that survives heavy customization.
Collections like this exist because filtering by use case alone returns hundreds of templates — useful when you want to browse, less useful when you have a specific meeting on the calendar tomorrow. A curated collection narrows that to the dozen or so templates that have actually held up across multiple presenter trials, audience types, and industry contexts. Use the list below as a shortlist; pick the closest structural match; then customize.
If you're researching the broader market, see our recommended companion directory of presentation tools.
How to choose between these templates
The fastest way to choose: scan the slide-count column on each detail page and pick the closest match for your time slot. A 12-slide deck runs 12–18 minutes with comfortable Q&A; a 20-slide deck runs 25–35 minutes and benefits from a hard intermission. If you're presenting to a senior audience that scans before speaking, lean toward the editorial and corporate styles. If you're presenting on stage with bright lights and a long-throw projector, lean toward bold and modern.
Color discipline matters even more than structure for first-impression decks. The Royal Indigo and Monochrome Ink palettes read as serious before a word is spoken — strong defaults for board meetings, finance reviews, and enterprise sales. Midnight Violet and Modern read as design-conscious — the right register for product-led companies and consumer-facing brands. Sunset Coral and Forest Sage are warmer — useful for healthcare, education, and any audience where institutional starchiness would land wrong.