According to a recent LinkedIn post from Chloris Geospatial, the company is partnering with Uganda-based Kijani Forestry on a pilot forest restoration project in Northern Uganda. The post describes Kijani as a social enterprise targeting reduced deforestation, rural poverty alleviation, and restoration of tropical forest ecosystems under the Equitable Earth carbon standard.
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The post indicates the project is planting more than 40 indigenous tree species and is positioned as community-centric through benefit sharing, long-term employment, non-timber forest products, and ecosystem services. Chloris is presented as the remote sensing partner, working with Equitable Earth to provide annual 30-meter biomass maps to support rigorous and verifiable carbon accounting.
For investors, the partnership suggests growing commercial traction for Chloris Geospatial’s biomass monitoring and MRV capabilities within the voluntary carbon market. Association with a standards body like Equitable Earth and an expansion-focused restoration initiative in Uganda could enhance Chloris’s credibility, support recurring data-service revenues, and strengthen its positioning in nature-based carbon and forestry tech segments.

