According to a recent LinkedIn post from Chloris Geospatial, the company is drawing attention to the role of land use in global emissions and the difficulty of accurately measuring forest carbon dynamics at scale. The post underscores that forests represent a major land-based carbon sink, yet decision-makers often rely on incomplete or outdated data for land, carbon, and conservation planning.
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The post highlights the firm’s Biomass Viewer, described as a free and open tool for observing how forests are changing globally, and positions it as a resource for scientists, conservationists, project developers, corporate sustainability teams, and policymakers. For investors, this emphasis on accessible, measurement-focused technology points to Chloris Geospatial’s strategic focus on data infrastructure for carbon markets and forest conservation, potentially reinforcing its relevance as demand grows for credible emissions and nature-based solutions data.

