According to a recent LinkedIn post from Chloris Geospatial, the company is working with Kijani Forestry on a pilot forest restoration project in Northern Uganda implemented under the Equitable Earth carbon standard. The post indicates that Kijani Forestry is focusing on reducing deforestation, addressing rural poverty, and restoring tropical forest ecosystems through planting over 40 indigenous tree species.
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The company’s LinkedIn post highlights that Chloris Geospatial has been selected as a remote sensing partner, providing annual 30 meter biomass maps to support carbon accounting for the project. This suggests a growing role for the company in measurement, reporting, and verification (MRV) services linked to nature-based carbon projects, which could enhance its positioning in the emerging voluntary carbon and climate-tech markets.
The collaboration with Equitable Earth and a Uganda-based social enterprise may signal increasing demand for data-driven MRV solutions in frontier and emerging markets. For investors, the post suggests potential for recurring service revenue tied to long-term restoration programs, as well as reputational benefits from alignment with biodiversity, community co-benefits, and high-integrity carbon standards.
As Kijani Forestry aims to expand restoration programs across Uganda, the need for scalable monitoring and verification could support future engagement for Chloris Geospatial beyond the initial pilot. If such partnerships become repeatable with other project developers or standards bodies, this model could contribute to revenue diversification and strengthen the company’s competitive position in geospatial climate analytics.

