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Chloris Geospatial Expands Access to Forest Carbon Data With Biomass Viewer

Chloris Geospatial Expands Access to Forest Carbon Data With Biomass Viewer

According to a recent LinkedIn post from Chloris Geospatial, the company is emphasizing the economic importance of forests in conjunction with the International Day of Forests and its 2024 theme, “Forests and Economies.” The post cites an estimate that $44 trillion of global GDP depends on nature, including forests, and argues that decisions on forest management and protection carry material economic implications.

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The company’s LinkedIn post highlights its focus on producing accurate, defensible, and accessible forest carbon data, positioning this information as a foundation for credible markets, supply chains, and investment decisions. As part of this strategy, Chloris is making 25 years of aboveground biomass data freely explorable through its Biomass Viewer, which uses the same dataset that underpins its enterprise offerings.

The post suggests that lowering barriers to access high-quality forest carbon data could stimulate broader adoption of data-driven approaches in climate finance, natural capital accounting, and forest-risk supply chain management. For investors, this move may indicate a land-and-expand strategy in which free data access increases user engagement and potentially drives demand for Chloris’s paid enterprise products and analytics services over time.

By aligning its product positioning with a global awareness event and quantifying the macroeconomic exposure to nature, Chloris appears to be framing its platform as infrastructure for emerging nature-related financial disclosures and carbon markets. If this framing gains traction with corporates, financial institutions, and policymakers, the company could see strengthened competitive differentiation in the geospatial and forest-carbon intelligence segment, with potential upside in recurring data and software revenue.

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