Tech Solutions Related To UN SDG 15: Life on Land
UN Sustainable Development Goal 15: Life on Land, aims to protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, halt and reverse land degradation, and halt biodiversity loss. Learn more about Life on Land in the US in our interactive report. Contact us for insights related to the 11,212 US organizations addressing UN SDG 15.
Discover tech solutions related to endangered species, land use, extinction and other key areas of biodiversity conservation below.
The first global-scale analysis of land areas requiring protection to solve the twin crises of biodiversity loss and climate change, upholding and strengthening Indigenous land rights. It builds upon the current network of protected areas but weaves in currently unprotected parcels that conserve the biological wealth of Earth.
Miradi - a Swahili word meaning 'project' or 'goal' - is a user-friendly program that allows nature conservation practitioners to design, manage, monitor, and learn from their projects to more effectively meet their conservation goals, following a process laid out in the Open Standards for the Practice of Conservation.
Dendra equips you with the data and tools to restore biodiverse ecosystems at scale. We enable the world’s biggest natural resources companies to restore biodiverse ecosystems efficiently, partner with governments to build data products for large scale restoration projects and stakeholder engagement, and help develop more sustainable and resilient construction, road and rail building projects.
i-Tree is a state-of-the-art, peer-reviewed software suite from the USDA Forest Service that provides urban and rural forestry analysis and benefits assessment tools. The i-Tree tools can help strengthen forest management and advocacy efforts by quantifying forest structure and the environmental benefits that trees provide. Demonstrate the value of trees to cities and communities with i-Tree data.
Earth Observation data are only helpful if you can understand and use it. While complex GIS files can be incredibly powerful, they require expertise and capacity to interpretation. At Comon, we work with our clients to ensure the data they receive support their current workflows to actively inform strategy decisions and restoration/conservation initiatives.