According to a recent LinkedIn post from Chloris Geospatial, the company is making 25 years of global aboveground forest biomass data freely explorable through its new Chloris Biomass Viewer. The tool is described as offering 30-meter resolution and global coverage, enabling users to analyze biomass gains and losses across any region over two and a half decades.
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The post highlights that the dataset underpins work by carbon project developers, global brands, standards bodies, and ratings agencies, and credits NASA, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the European Space Agency for the satellite data foundation. For investors, this move suggests a strategic emphasis on open-access tools that could broaden Chloris Geospatial’s user base, strengthen its role in forest carbon monitoring, and potentially drive demand for premium analytics or enterprise services.
By positioning the Biomass Viewer as open science infrastructure for large-scale forest monitoring, the post indicates alignment with growing regulatory and voluntary market needs for high-quality MRV (measurement, reporting, and verification) in carbon and sustainability markets. This visibility may enhance the company’s competitive position in climate-tech and remote-sensing ecosystems, potentially supporting long-term revenue opportunities tied to carbon accounting, risk assessment, and nature-based solutions.

