According to a recent LinkedIn post from Chloris Geospatial, the company is drawing attention to the Global Canopy Forest 500 2026 report and its implications for deforestation regulation. The post suggests that regulations such as the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) are already influencing corporate behavior, even before entering into force.
Claim 55% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
The LinkedIn post highlights a key limitation in current supply chain verification approaches, arguing that focusing solely on individual company supply chains may miss broader landscape-level forest carbon trends. It notes that a firm can appear deforestation-free on paper while still sourcing from jurisdictions where overall forest carbon is declining.
Chloris Geospatial’s post points to analysis from its Head of Solutions, who links supply chain accountability to jurisdictional approaches and calls for measurement infrastructure that connects the two. For investors, this emphasis suggests the company is positioning its technology and expertise around emerging regulatory needs and landscape-scale monitoring, areas that could see rising demand as deforestation and FLAG-related rules tighten.
The focus on infrastructure that can bridge corporate supply chain data with jurisdictional forest carbon metrics may indicate a potential growth avenue in services and tools for compliance, risk management, and impact reporting. If regulators and large buyers increasingly require landscape-level verification, firms like Chloris Geospatial could benefit from expanded adoption of geospatial analytics across forestry, agriculture, and commodity value chains.

