According to a recent LinkedIn post from Chloris Geospatial, the company is highlighting a new white paper developed with SustainCERT on applying the GHG Protocol Land Sector and Removals (LSR) Standard to land-use emissions. The publication is described as a practical guide for organizations with land-based operations or supply chains, particularly in agriculture, that are working through FLAG reporting requirements.
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The post suggests the white paper focuses on using satellite-derived biomass data to implement the LSR Standard and achieve higher-tier, assurance-ready data via stock-change accounting. It also indicates coverage of both direct and supply chain land-use change approaches, depending on traceability levels, signaling an emphasis on technical robustness in carbon accounting.
For investors, this content points to Chloris Geospatial’s intent to position its remote sensing and biomass data capabilities as enablers of advanced ESG and carbon accounting workflows. As regulatory and voluntary disclosure frameworks tighten around FLAG emissions, such expertise could increase the company’s relevance to large corporates and verification bodies seeking scalable, Tier 3 data solutions.
The collaboration with SustainCERT, a recognized name in climate certification and assurance, may enhance Chloris Geospatial’s credibility in the climate-accounting ecosystem. If the white paper gains adoption among agricultural supply chain actors, it could support demand for Chloris Geospatial’s data products and services, potentially strengthening its competitive position in remote-sensing-based carbon measurement.

