Vol. I · Reference 02 — Vendors UAE 2026

Factual · No partnership claimed

I. A reference — for operators, by operators

Landscape monitoring vendors active in UAE — 2026 reference.

A factual reference of monitoring and intelligence vendors with relevance to UAE premium landscape operators. Public companies, public sources, no disparagement, no claim of partnership. Where Prime Oasis fits within this landscape — described in our own words at the end.

Editorial policy

  • i.Factual treatment. Each entry describes what the vendor publicly offers. No comparative judgement is passed.
  • ii.Public sources only. Every row links to the vendor's own public site so the reader can verify independently.
  • iii.No claim of partnership. Inclusion does not imply that Prime Oasis uses, integrates with, or endorses the vendor.

Published

Q1 2026

Last updated

2026-05-25

II. The vendor landscape, in brief

Three categories. One operator decision.

Vendors with relevance to UAE landscape monitoring divide naturally into three broad categories. The first are satellite imagery and analytics players — companies that observe the earth from above, then sell raw imagery, derived analytics, or platform access. The second are in-ground sensor providers — companies that supply instruments measuring soil moisture, salinity, and microclimate at the rootzone, packaged either as standalone hardware or as a sensor-plus-data service. The third are integrated agronomic platforms — companies whose offering combines multiple data sources, sometimes with field-level recommendations.

The categories overlap. A vendor primarily known for satellite imagery may also offer ground-truth modules; a sensor provider may add analytics; an integrated platform may not own its own satellites or instruments at all. The point of categorising is operator clarity — to know, before reading further, what kind of work each vendor does day-to-day.

Almost none of these vendors are UAE-headquartered. Many serve the region through marketplaces, distributors, or direct partnership. Their relevance to a UAE premium landscape operator is therefore a function of what they do and how well that work travels across geographies and climates — not where they are incorporated.

"Public companies, public references, no judgement passed."

— Editorial principle for this reference

III. The vendors — reference table

Six rows. One factual frame.

Five vendors and Prime Oasis. Each row points to its own public source. Pricing fields read "Quote-only" when the vendor does not publish pricing on its site.

Vendor HQ Primary offering Public client examples Public pricing Best-fit deployment

constellr.com

Freiburg, Germany Thermal satellite observation; land-surface temperature data products and APIs. Not enumerated on public site. Quote-only Operators needing land-surface temperature data at scale across large parcels or city-level programmes.

up42.com · Airbus subsidiary

Berlin, Germany Geospatial marketplace and platform; aggregated satellite imagery and analytics from multiple providers. Not enumerated on public site. Quote-only Buyers who need access to many imagery sources through a single procurement and API surface.

sentera.com

Minneapolis, United States Aerial and satellite imagery, sensors and analytics for agriculture and adjacent vegetation use cases. Not enumerated on public site. Quote-only Commercial agriculture and large-area vegetation programmes seeking integrated capture-and-analytics.

agrocares.com

Wageningen, Netherlands Soil scanning instruments and agronomic intelligence services; portable soil-analysis devices linked to a data platform. Not enumerated on public site. Quote-only Operators wanting structured soil chemistry data alongside, or in place of, in-ground telemetry.

sensoterra.com

Amsterdam, Netherlands Wireless in-soil moisture sensors and a connected moisture-data platform. Not enumerated on public site. Quote-only Operators primarily seeking distributed soil-moisture telemetry without a heavier integrated platform.

primeoasis.ai

Dubai, United Arab Emirates Plant intelligence layer (patent-pending). Outcome-first guidance for premium UAE landscapes. Bluewaters, W Residences (under NDA) From AED 10,000 / month, Premium tier Premium UAE landscapes — golf turf, branded residences, 5-star resorts, municipal greening.

"Quote-only" indicates the vendor does not publish a public price list on its own site at the date of last review (2026-05-25). Operators should request a formal quotation from the vendor for procurement purposes. Inclusion of any vendor in this table is not an endorsement, an integration claim, or evidence of partnership with Prime Oasis AI.

IV. Detail per vendor

One paragraph each — in the vendor's own frame.

Each entry below describes the vendor as the vendor publicly describes itself. Links open to the vendor's own site, which remains the authoritative source.

01 — Satellite thermal imagery

Constellr

Constellr is a German earth-observation company headquartered in Freiburg, focused on high-resolution thermal infrared imagery from a planned small-satellite constellation. The company's public materials describe land-surface temperature as the central data product, with stated relevance to agriculture, water management, and climate monitoring at scale. Operationally, Constellr's offering is upstream of the operator — it produces a data layer that downstream platforms, governments, and large industrial buyers can integrate into their own workflows.

For a UAE premium landscape operator, the relevance of a thermal-satellite supplier is conditional on the operator already having, or commissioning, the analytical layer that converts the data into a decision. Constellr's own site does not publish per-property pricing, public client logos, or a turn-key landscape product. Operators evaluating Constellr should consult constellr.com directly for current product status and commercial terms.

02 — Geospatial marketplace

UP42

UP42 is a Berlin-based geospatial platform, a subsidiary of Airbus. Its public position is that of a marketplace — bringing together imagery products and analytical algorithms from multiple providers under a single procurement and API surface. The operator who reaches UP42 is typically a developer or a programme manager building a custom geospatial workflow rather than a turn-key landscape buyer; UP42 sells access to building blocks, not a finished monitoring service.

For a UAE landscape operator, UP42's relevance is indirect. The platform is well-suited to organisations with in-house geospatial engineering capacity who want flexibility across multiple data sources. Pricing is project-dependent and not published on the public site as a simple list. Operators evaluating UP42 should consult up42.com for current catalogue, terms, and parent-company governance details.

03 — Aerial & satellite agronomy

Sentera

Sentera is a Minneapolis-headquartered company offering aerial and satellite imagery with downstream analytics, primarily framed toward commercial agriculture. The company's public site describes a stack that spans capture hardware (sensors, aerial platforms) through field-level analytical outputs. The orientation is broad-acre — row crops, orchards, agronomic research — rather than amenity landscape; the underlying data layers, however, are adjacent enough that some operators in other vegetation segments consult Sentera as a reference.

For a UAE premium landscape operator, the question to ask of Sentera is fit. Commercial agriculture analytics translate imperfectly into ornamental amenity work, where species variety, canopy structure, and operational tolerances differ markedly. Sentera's public site does not enumerate landscape-segment clients in the UAE. Operators should consult sentera.com directly to verify current product scope and regional availability.

04 — Soil scanning & agronomy

AgroCares

AgroCares is a Wageningen-based company whose public offering centres on portable soil-scanning instruments and an associated agronomic intelligence service. The technical premise is that a structured soil chemistry profile, captured efficiently in the field, drives better fertiliser and management decisions. The company positions itself in the agronomic-services adjacency rather than the satellite-imagery adjacency; the data product is what soil contains, not what canopy reflects.

For a UAE landscape operator, AgroCares is a candidate worth considering if the operator's primary diagnostic gap is soil chemistry — salinity, macro- and micronutrients, organic carbon — rather than continuous in-ground telemetry or remotely-sensed canopy signal. Pricing is not published on the public site as a list. Operators evaluating AgroCares should consult agrocares.com for current product scope and regional distribution.

05 — Wireless soil-moisture telemetry

Sensoterra

Sensoterra is an Amsterdam-based provider of wireless in-soil moisture sensors and a connected platform that aggregates the resulting moisture readings into a usable interface. The public offering is focused — a single class of instrument plus the surrounding data layer — making the company easy to evaluate for operators whose primary diagnostic question is moisture distribution across an irrigated area.

For a UAE landscape operator, the relevance of a moisture-telemetry supplier is conditional on the surrounding decision layer. Soil-moisture readings, on their own, are an input into an irrigation decision rather than a decision in themselves. Operators with mature in-house irrigation expertise may find such telemetry a sufficient diagnostic; operators looking for integrated, outcome-level guidance typically need the readings reconciled with other signals. Pricing is not published as a list on the public site. Operators evaluating Sensoterra should consult sensoterra.com directly.

V. Where Prime Oasis fits — in our own words

A different category — not a sixth vendor in the same row.

The five vendors above are vendors of inputs. Prime Oasis is an intelligence layer over inputs.

Prime Oasis is not a sensor vendor. We do not manufacture instruments. We are not an imagery service. We do not own or operate satellites. We are not a soil scanner. We do not sell a portable diagnostic device. Each of the five vendors above is, in different ways, a vendor of inputs — a class of measurement that becomes useful only when an intelligence layer turns it into a decision.

Prime Oasis is that intelligence layer, calibrated for UAE conditions and amenity-grade species. The methodology — the specific instruments selected, the indices computed, the fusion logic, the calibration values, the thresholds at which guidance flips from observation to recommendation — is patent-pending under PCT and held confidential. Operators who engage Prime Oasis receive the outcomes the methodology produces; they do not receive, and are not asked to operate, the methodology itself.

This positioning is deliberate. In a category where many of the available offerings are inputs, the operator's challenge is rarely the absence of data; it is the absence of a reliable, UAE-tuned layer that converts data into a decision an agronomist or facility manager can act on within a short summer-stress window. Prime Oasis is built for that conversion. The premium vertical focus — golf, branded residences, 5-star resorts, municipal greening — is the working scope.

Disclosure boundary

We do not disclose, on this page or anywhere on this site, which of the vendors above — if any — Prime Oasis uses, integrates with, or licences. The presence of any vendor in the reference table is not evidence of partnership; the absence of disclosure is not evidence of non-use.

The methodology is held under PCT. The means is the moat. Outcomes are evidenced under pilot agreement.

VI. Honest scope — what this reference is, and is not

Boundaries, drawn deliberately.

A reference is only useful when its scope is explicit. The two cards below set the line.

What this reference is

  • A factual reference of selected vendors with relevance to UAE premium landscape operators, intended to support operator decision-making.
  • A starting point for operator desk-research — each row linking to the vendor's own public site as the authoritative source.
  • A snapshot at a defined date (2026-05-25), refreshed quarterly as the landscape changes.
  • A complement to the approaches comparison, which categorises monitoring methods rather than naming vendors.

What this reference is not

  • An exhaustive directory of every vendor active in UAE landscape monitoring. Quarterly revisions add new entries; omissions are not judgements.
  • A claim that Prime Oasis uses, integrates with, or partners with any vendor listed. Our methodology remains confidential under PCT.
  • An endorsement, recommendation, or ranking of any listed vendor. The order of rows is descriptive, not evaluative.
  • A procurement RFP shortlist. Procurement decisions require independent diligence, formal quotations, and reference checks beyond this reference.
VII. Frequently asked — Vendor reference

Questions on the reference and its limits.

Why are some vendors on this page not based in UAE? +
Most monitoring and intelligence vendors with relevance to UAE landscape operators are headquartered outside the country — primarily in Europe and North America. They reach the UAE market either directly, through distributors, or via geospatial marketplaces. The inclusion criterion for this reference is relevance to UAE premium landscape operators, not country of incorporation. Prime Oasis is the one UAE-headquartered entry in this revision; new UAE-domiciled players will be added in subsequent quarterly updates as they appear with maintained public sites.
Does Prime Oasis use any of these vendors? +
We do not disclose our underlying technology stack or partners. Our methodology is patent-pending and held confidential. The presence of any vendor on this page is not evidence of partnership, use, integration, or endorsement, and the absence of an explicit statement to the contrary should not be read either way. The disclosure boundary is deliberate and is described in the methodology page.
How was this list compiled? +
From a desk review of monitoring and intelligence vendors active in landscape, turf, or agronomic adjacent segments with a verifiable public web presence and offerings relevant to UAE premium-vertical operators. Each entry links out to the vendor's own public site, which is the authoritative source for the description. We did not interview the vendors; we did not request their participation; we summarise what is publicly stated.
Why are vendors A or B not on this list? +
This reference is not an exhaustive directory. We update it quarterly. If a vendor is publicly active in UAE landscape monitoring, has a maintained public site, and we are aware of the vendor, we will consider adding the vendor in the next revision. The omission of a vendor from the current revision is not a judgement on the vendor; it is a function of scope and our awareness at the point of publication. Operators who believe a vendor should be considered for the next revision are welcome to write to us with the reference.
Can I cite this page in a procurement document? +
Yes, on the understanding that the page is a factual reference, not an RFP shortlist, not an endorsement, and not a procurement recommendation. Each vendor row links to that vendor's own public site, which is the authoritative source for any procurement decision. We recommend independent verification of every claim against the vendor's own materials, formal quotations, and reference checks before procurement commitments are made.
How does this differ from /landscape-monitoring-approaches-uae? +
The approaches page compares categories of monitoring — visual inspection only, handheld sensing, IoT-only deployment, satellite-only services, hybrid intelligence layers. The reference here names specific vendors and points to their public sites. The two pages are complementary: read the approaches page to decide which category fits your operation, then read this page to see who is publicly active within the categories that apply.

Begin

References describe the field. Pilots prove the layer.

A sixty-day pilot on a single property. No equipment cost. Outcome report at day sixty — water trajectory, intervention windows, salinity status. The fastest way to evaluate the intelligence layer is to operate it.