Field researchers collecting data in a restoration site

Nature Data is Gold - The Foundation of Successful Restoration Projects

Published on: September 20, 2023

In the world of nature restoration, data is absolute gold. It's incredibly challenging for reforestation teams and field crews to capture data on the ground, so when it happens, it's something truly amazing.

Many restoration organizations face a common challenge: they lack the internal expertise to wrangle all this precious data, clean it up, make sense of it, visualize it, and share it effectively. As a result, valuable information often sits idle in whatever original capturing framework was used. Perhaps someone analyzed it once and created a report, but then it remains untapped—a wasted resource of immense potential.

Geographically Referenced Data: The Crown Jewel

Among all types of nature data, geographically referenced information stands as the most valuable. A simple point on a map is a good start, but a polygon—a defined area on the landscape—is absolutely golden.

When you can say, "In this polygon, these specific things are happening" or "These photos refer to this precise area," you're adding a much higher degree of fidelity and reality to your project. This is something that Google Maps or satellite imagery often lack on their own.

Once you have a polygon, the possibilities expand dramatically:

  • It becomes the foundation for any geospatial modeling
  • You can query different datasets like biodiversity indexes
  • You can track deforestation across years
  • You can anchor field observations, photos, and measurements to exact locations

The Foundation for Analysis and Impact Communication

This georeferenced data is the bedrock upon which all other types of analysis must be built. It's also the essential foundation for any kind of external communication about a project's impact. Effective storytelling about restoration work needs to start with georeferenced data—points being the basic level, and polygons being the absolute gold standard.

What's even more valuable—and quite rare in my experience with operational projects at scale—is having this information tracked across multiple years. While this type of longitudinal data is somewhat common in scientific literature, it's rare in on-the-ground restoration projects. When a project has collected multiple types of data—from photos and field studies to drone footage—consistently over years, that's when the true potential unlocks.

When I encounter such comprehensive datasets, I light up because there's so much that can be done—not just for internal understanding, but also for showcasing impact and operational excellence to funders and sharing with the world what's truly happening in the project.

Making Data Meaningful Through Geographic Context

The baseline truth is that when data isn't georeferenced, it's almost meaningless. You simply don't know what the data is talking about. The physical world is incredibly complex and varies significantly almost by the meter, requiring us to root any data in physical reality.

This geographical context is especially important because the people who work in restoration projects typically do so because they love nature and have spent years understanding how to restore it. Their thinking is rooted in the physical world. Only when data can be represented through maps—in the way that mirrors how they understand landscapes and geography—can these restoration practitioners truly make sense of that information.

In essence, when data isn't contextualized in a map and properly georeferenced, it lacks transparency and loses much of its potential value.

The Golden Opportunity

For restoration projects—whether philanthropic efforts or carbon initiatives—properly collected, georeferenced, and visualized data represents a golden opportunity to improve operations, increase transparency, access funding, and contribute to scientific research.

Every point on the map, every polygon outlining a restoration area, every photo tied to a specific location—these are not just data points but treasures that can transform how we understand, communicate, and ultimately succeed in the vital work of restoring our natural world.