biodiversity.earth
Aerial view of intact tropical forest
Five-year impact pathway

149,000 hectares of verified nature restoration.

Four active projects across Central Africa, East Africa, West Africa, and Central Asia. Each project is independently audited for biodiversity impact and monitored by continuous satellite analysis.

149,000ha
Hectares under restoration
4
Active restoration projects
4
Countries of operation
30+
Projects in development

Geographic focus

Africa

Africa represents the most concentrated pipeline of biodiversity restoration projects globally, with more than 30 projects in active development as of 2024 (NatureFinance/ANCA, October 2024). The combination of ecological significance, land availability, and emerging regulatory frameworks — including national TNFD alignment programs — positions the continent as the primary geography for high-integrity biodiversity credit generation over the next decade.

Central Asia

Central Asia — specifically the Aral Sea basin — represents one of the most significant ecological restoration opportunities on earth. The desiccation of the Aral Sea created over 50,000 square kilometres of exposed lakebed subject to desertification and toxic dust dispersal. Large-scale afforestation through saxaul planting is the scientifically validated approach to stabilising this landscape and rebuilding functional ecosystem structure across the region.

Current market (2024)
< $2M
Voluntary biodiversity credits sold globally
WEF projection (2030)
$7B
Projected market size
Regulatory drivers
CSRD ESRS E4 / TNFD
Corporate biodiversity disclosure obligations

Active projects

All four projects are independently audited and available for corporate stewardship contributions. Pricing is expressed per hectare under active restoration management.

Dense tropical forest canopy in Central Africa
ARR
13,750 ha

Greenzone Reforestation

Congo Basin, Cameroon

Restores native forest species across degraded land in the Congo Basin, one of the world's most biodiverse regions. The project targets areas with high deforestation pressure and works alongside local communities to establish long-term ecological corridors.

Native canopy species: 47 recorded
Satellite-monitored
Pricing on request
Open for enquiries
Agricultural landscape with trees in Uganda
Agroforestry
44,000 ha

Bulindi Agroforestry and Conservation

Holma and Masindi Districts, Uganda

Integrates biodiversity-rich tree species into agricultural land alongside chimpanzee habitat corridors in western Uganda. The project supports smallholder farmers while restoring structural habitat connectivity across a critically fragmented landscape.

Habitat corridors: 6 active chimpanzee zones
Satellite-monitored
Pricing on request
Open for enquiries
Arid landscape with young tree plantings
Afforestation
31,250 ha

Aral Sea Afforestation

Kyzylorda Region, Kazakhstan

Stabilises the exposed Aral Sea bed through saxaul tree planting, reversing desertification and creating habitat across one of the most severely degraded landscapes in the world. The project addresses both ecological and public health impacts of airborne dust and soil erosion.

Saxaul trees planted: 2.4 million
Satellite-monitored
Pricing on request
Open for enquiries
Rural landscape with savanna woodland in West Africa
Clean Energy
60,000 ha

Sauki Clean Energy

Northern Nigeria

Distributes efficient cookstoves reducing deforestation pressure on surrounding forests and savanna ecosystems across Northern Nigeria. By displacing traditional biomass combustion, the project protects standing woodland and supports measurable reductions in habitat degradation.

Equivalent hectares protected: 60,000
Satellite-monitored
Pricing on request
Open for enquiries
Verification methodology

What makes our monitoring evidence-grade

01

Ecological baseline on day one

Before any intervention, we commission an independent ecological survey. This establishes the pre-restoration condition of every hectare: vegetation cover, bare soil ratio, canopy structure, species indicators, habitat connectivity score, and land-cover classification. This baseline is what your five-year assessment is measured against.

02

Continuous satellite intelligence

We do not check in annually and report. Satellite data streams continuously against each parcel. We track: NDVI (vegetation density and health), EVI (canopy response), BSI (bare soil exposure), NDWI (moisture and water stress), SAR backscatter (structural stability and disturbance detection), and landscape fragmentation index. If something changes, we see it.

03

Third-party field verification

Annual ground-truth visits by independent ecologists cross-reference satellite signals against physical conditions. Field data is archived alongside satellite records. Both are available to institutional buyers on request.

04

Five-year baseline-to-outcome report

The definitive assessment. Every five years, all monitoring data is compiled into a single impact profile: how the hectare has changed from baseline across vegetation, habitat structure, land stability, and landscape connectivity. This is the document your auditor needs.

All monitoring data for institutional credit holders is available through our secure reporting portal. We do not produce headline numbers and call it reporting. We produce structured evidence.

Landowners and project developers

Bring a biodiversity project to market.

Green Earth Group works with landowners, conservation organisations, and project developers to bring high-integrity biodiversity restoration projects into the voluntary market. If you hold land with restoration potential, or manage a project seeking institutional distribution, contact our project development team.

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