Nature and Biodiversity

Why data integrity matters for net-zero and nature-positive

New algorithmic monitoring and earth observation technology could provide effective carbon accounting and accurate data will be key for that future.

New algorithmic monitoring and earth observation technology could provide effective carbon accounting and accurate data will be key for that future. Image: Unsplash/John Salzarulo

Florian Reber
Head of Partnerships, Chloris Geospatial Inc.
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This article is part of: Centre for Nature and Climate

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  • A recent climate change report highlighted the need to protect and restore nature in achieving the necessary climate goals to preserve the planet.
  • Business interest in nature conservation and biodiversity provides optimism towards natural conservation but current carbon accounting processes let these efforts down.
  • New algorithmic monitoring and earth observation technology could provide effective carbon accounting and accurate data will be key for that future.

The science is clear. We have seven years left to cut emissions at the scale required to have a chance of leaving a liveable planet for future generations. The most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report was the latest in urgent calls for action. The report confirms the critical role that the protection and restoration of nature play in achieving that goal.

In fact, the IPCC confirms that halting the destruction of intact ecosystems – forests in particular – constitutes the third most impactful climate solution we have at hand today, right after wind and solar energy.

The challenge is daunting but there is hope. There has never been more business interest in nature conservation and restoration than there is today. Companies are taking unprecedented action via the growing voluntary carbon market, their supply chains and investment portfolios as part of their commitments to transitioning their businesses to net-zero and nature-positive.

Meanwhile, reporting frameworks, regulators and investors are asking for better disclosure on the climate impact of actions taken to protect and restore nature. This is encouraging.

But there is a catch: our current carbon accounting systems are not fit for purpose. Without validation, accountability or measurability, a company’s sustainability data can be compromised. That can raise questions about the credibility of a company’s natural capital investments via the carbon market or its supply chains.

Have you read?

New algorithms can improve carbon accounting

Current accounting systems do not capture the emission reductions and removals achieved by companies’ attempts to protect and restore nature with the integrity, reliability, speed and scalability that the transition to net-zero and nature-positivity requires.

Recent advances in earth observation science have unlocked new solutions now being introduced to the market. Algorithmic in nature, they have the potential to transform carbon and natural capital accounting by directly estimating the carbon removed from our atmosphere by nature-based solutions (more on the meaning and importance of direct estimates below). Businesses, standards and certification bodies must embrace these technological advances as important enablers towards a net-zero, nature-positive economy.

Here are three reflections on why this matters and how companies working with algorithmic earth observation technologies can take action to infuse their solutions with trust for improved carbon accounting.

1. We need to see what the atmosphere sees

Satellite images have been used for many years to estimate CO₂ emissions from land use conversion, for example, when a piece of the Amazon rainforest is cleared to make space for agricultural land. However, these approaches only capture emissions from tree cover loss that triggers a change in land use classification. They do not directly estimate biomass loss, which has at least two major limitations.

Firstly, this approach can’t measure forest degradation (e.g. small-scale logging that does not trigger a change in land use classification under a strict definition of deforestation). As forest degradation can cause as much carbon emissions as deforestation, these standard approaches may be blind to 50% of the problem. Secondly, they can’t see the positive carbon impacts of forest growth and regrowth. That means companies can’t show off the positive effects of their investments with confidence.

For a credible transition to net zero, we need to power our carbon accounting systems with measurement solutions that overcome these shortcomings. To assess the climate impact of investments, we need monitoring solutions that see what the atmosphere sees and aren’t limited by definitions of what counts as land use change or deforestation, which suffer from human or political biases.

2. Algorithmic earth observation’s potential

Advances in algorithmic earth observation technology now make it possible to directly estimate the carbon stored in trees for any piece of land and how this changes over time (rather than relying on land cover classification).

The most advanced earth observation approaches do this by fusing data from various space-borne sensors, including laser, radar, optical and ancillary data. Advanced algorithmic approaches quantify these ecological processes with unprecedented quality while unlocking the cost-effectiveness and data consistency that allows investors to truly account for the carbon stored in nature resulting from their actions.

It is a much-needed step change in the quality of carbon accounting technologies.

3. Necessitates corporate responsibility of algorithmic data providers

Unleashing the potential of algorithmic carbon measurement solutions necessarily raises questions about the algorithm’s training and validation regime. The accuracy of an algorithm’s estimates depends upon the quality of the training data it receives.

Feeding an algorithm with high-quality, high-integrity training data is essential for its performance. But more is needed. The key question is how well the algorithm performs against fully independent, high-quality instruments estimating the same unit at a comparable scale. In the context of carbon stored in trees, the gold standard is estimates delivered by high-quality airborne laser instruments.

Comparison between independent airborne LiDAR (ALS) and Chloris derived estimates. carbon accounting
Comparison between independent airborne LiDAR (ALS) and Chloris derived estimates. Image: Chloris Geospatial

Data integrity key to net zero

At Chloris Geospatial, we firmly believe in the need to equip the world with trustworthy algorithms that are fit for purpose and built with the highest standards of scientific integrity.

That’s why we compared our machine-learning-derived predictions of forest carbon stock and change against such airborne laser-derived measurements carried out by NASA and other academic research institutions. We made our validation results publicly available.

The result? Comparable levels of accuracy in measuring carbon stock changes but at a fraction of the cost of airborne lidar and with the ability to perform measurements repeatedly and consistently in space and time.

This insight matters as it proves that algorithmic solutions can deliver the required data quality in a scalable and cost-effective way, thereby contributing to keeping more funds available for the actual conservation and restoration activities on the ground.

In conclusion, as we strive towards a sustainable future, we must prioritize this level of transparency, data quality and cost-effectiveness to achieve a high-integrity transition to net-zero and nature-positive economies for all.

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The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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