According to a recent LinkedIn post from Chloris Geospatial, the company is introducing Chloris Biomass Viewer, a tool providing 25 years of global aboveground forest biomass data at 30‑meter resolution. The post indicates that this dataset, previously used by carbon project developers, global brands, standards bodies, and ratings agencies, is now available for public exploration.
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The LinkedIn post highlights that users can explore any region on Earth, track biomass gains and losses over two and a half decades, and examine where forest carbon is being lost rather than just where trees are disappearing. The post also credits satellite data from NASA, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the European Space Agency as foundational to the platform, positioning the viewer as part of broader open science infrastructure for global forest monitoring.
From an investor perspective, the move to make long‑term, high‑resolution biomass data freely accessible may support wider adoption of Chloris Geospatial’s methodologies and increase the company’s visibility in the forest carbon and MRV (measurement, reporting, and verification) ecosystem. While offering the viewer for free could limit direct revenue from data access, it may enhance the firm’s role as a reference data provider, potentially strengthening demand for paid analytics, tailored services, or enterprise solutions built on the same datasets.
The emphasis on trust by established carbon market participants and alignment with major space agencies’ data suggests a strategic effort to position Chloris Geospatial within the critical infrastructure layer of carbon accounting and remote sensing. If the viewer accelerates market standardization and improves confidence in forest carbon metrics, it could indirectly benefit the company’s competitive standing and long‑term commercial opportunities in climate and nature‑related finance markets.

