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.