
In the news
Select articles showcasing Flash Forest’s innovative drone reforestation technology.
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World Economic Forum
“Flash Forest can plant up to 1 million seed pods a day, helping restore land that has been ravaged by fire.”
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CNN
“In a bid to restore forests and fight climate change, Canadian startup Flash Forest aims to plant 1 billion trees by 2028, using drones and aerial mapping.”
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Forbes
“Having the hard labor done by a drone accelerates the pace of reforestation by at least 10 times over having humans alone do the work. And two humans could potentially direct 10 of these drones, so the pace can be geometrically accelerated.”
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Google
“Their technology maps out the best planting locations in an area with an average planting density of 1,000 to 2,000 trees per hectare. By working with local NGOs, scientists and experts, they make sure to only plant natural species with high sequestration rates.”
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The Washington Post
“While many think of drones as a toy or, in battle, a lethally precise military tool, Flash Forest has gone a new route: It’s deploying drones to nourish life.”
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Emission Reduction Alberta
“Flash Forest’s technology not only helps make tree planting more efficient, it also makes it easier to plant trees in difficult to reach areas and dangerous environments.”
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CBC
“They have already managed to plant several thousand trees across Ontario and Canada. Dwight Drummond caught up with one of their co-founders to talk about how it works.”
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Newsweek
“Their ambitious program comes at a time when climate change, and related issues like deforestation, are considered among the most important of our time.”
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Fast Company
“Because the company chooses native species and uses its seed pods to protect the seeds from drought, the process doesn’t typically require work from humans to keep the seedlings alive.”
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Daily Mail
“The drones don’t just carry seeds themselves, but pods of nutrient rich soil packed around three pre-germinated seeds like a casing.”
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National Observer
“Across the world, forests are destroyed much quicker than they are replenished. Flash Forest wants to help fix that.”
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Daily Hive
“Two of the 16 ventures in Earth Tech include Flash Forest, a Canadian drone reforestation company that allows drones to germinate tree seeds, and Water Rangers, an open-data platform that provides water test kits to empower others to protect freshwater.”
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World Wildlife Fund
“‘Nature tech’ is, appropriately enough, a growing industry. An umbrella term for the application of modern technologies to help us monitor, manage and conserve nature, it’s become increasingly crucial as environmental crises accelerate around us.”
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The Index Project
“We’re trying to pull as much carbon out of the atmosphere as possible, to try to mitigate the impact and rate of climate change.”
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The Globe and Mail
“More broadly, we pointed to the emergence of a ‘New North,’ a collection of geographies such as the Great Lakes region and Scandinavia that are making significant investments in renewable energy, food production and economic diversification.”
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Canadian Business
“Flash Forest has run some of its most successful pilots in the pliable, eager soil of fire-ravaged sites using a proprietary combination of automation, aerial-mapping software and meticulously engineered seed pods that regenerate ecosystems—and fast.”
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New York Post
“A Canadian startup named Flash Forest is using drones to plant thousands of trees a month as a way to combat deforestation caused by logging, fires and animal agriculture.”
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New York Magazine
“Founded in 2019, Flash Forest creates seedpods — a concoction that includes seeds, fertilizer, mycorrhizae, and ‘everything that we can think of that will help promote germination and resilience,’ according to Jones.”
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CTV
“With the effects of climate change becoming more apparent and more dangerous every day, a Canadian company has stepped up with plans to use drones to plant more than one billion trees by 2028.”
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BNN Bloomberg
“Toronto startup Flash Forest aims to regrow the world’s forests with drones, and plans to plant 1 billion trees by 2028.”
