A LinkedIn post from Felt during SF Climate Week highlights how environmental organizations are using its mapping platform for conservation and climate-related work. The post cites use cases from SPUN, Earth Insight, and RAMO Earth to illustrate applications in biodiversity mapping, industrial impact assessment, and AI-driven remote sensing.
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
According to the post, SPUN built a high-resolution mycorrhizal biodiversity map covering 2.8 billion fungal DNA sequences across 130 countries with a very small team and three-month build time, reaching over 12,000 active users in more than 150 countries at launch. Earth Insight is described as using modern GIS tools to map threats from industrial extraction to biodiversity and Indigenous communities, while RAMO Earth reportedly applies AI-based remote sensing to support land and carbon projects at scale.
The post suggests that Felt’s modern GIS capabilities are enabling faster deployment, cross-time-zone collaboration, and broader organizational access to spatial data beyond specialist teams. For investors, these examples may indicate traction in high-impact climate and conservation segments, showcasing scalability of the platform and reinforcing Felt’s positioning in data-intensive, mission-driven geospatial workflows.
The emphasis on globally distributed use cases and thousands of active users could imply growing network effects and a diversified customer base across NGOs and climate-tech entities. If sustained, such adoption trends may support recurring usage, expansion opportunities into adjacent industries that require geospatial analytics, and potential integration with broader environmental, social, and governance data ecosystems.

