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Felt Expands Climate-Focused GIS and AI Footprint With New High-Visibility Deployments

Felt Expands Climate-Focused GIS and AI Footprint With New High-Visibility Deployments

Felt continued to showcase momentum this week, highlighting new climate and environmental applications built on its modern GIS and AI platform. The company emphasized rapid, low-friction spatial analysis and high-visibility deployments with nonprofits and climate-focused organizations.

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At a GeoMeetup event, Felt demonstrated its Felt AI platform by building a climate vulnerability mapping app for California communities in minutes. The prototype identified major greenhouse gas emitters within a 50-mile radius and mapped vulnerable populations, underscoring a push toward ESG and policy-oriented use cases.

The demo also suggested a strategic focus on low-code or no-code workflows that could widen access to geospatial analytics for non-specialist users. Such capabilities may lower adoption barriers for public-sector, sustainability, and infrastructure clients that require frequent spatial analysis but lack deep GIS expertise.

Separately, Felt’s platform was featured in the Watershed Pollution Map, a U.K. environmental data project aggregating more than 120 datasets on landfills, contamination, “forever chemicals,” and water quality. The map attracted over 700,000 views in its first weeks and supported reporting by The Guardian, ITV News, and The Independent.

This high-visibility collaboration with nonprofit Watershed highlights Felt’s traction in complex, data-heavy transparency and public-interest journalism initiatives. The exposure could reinforce brand recognition and support demand from NGOs, media, and government stakeholders focused on environmental risk.

During SF Climate Week, Felt also spotlighted customer use cases from SPUN, Earth Insight, and RAMO Earth. These projects ranged from a global mycorrhizal biodiversity map built from 2.8 billion DNA sequences to mapping industrial extraction threats and AI-driven remote sensing for land and carbon projects.

The reported reach of more than 12,000 active users across 150 countries on SPUN’s project illustrates the platform’s scalability for global, data-intensive applications. Broad internal access to mapping tools and cross-time-zone collaboration further position Felt as a practical choice for mission-driven organizations.

Collectively, the week’s updates point to growing adoption of Felt’s GIS and AI tools in ESG, climate risk, conservation, and environmental transparency domains. This expanding set of real-world deployments and community engagement initiatives may strengthen the company’s competitive standing and support its longer-term growth prospects.

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