Abstract
High-integrity carbon offset systems require scientifically robust and spatially explicit frameworks to quantify carbon pools and fluxes across ecosystems. We present an integrative methodology that combines eddy covariance measurements, airborne and satellite remote sensing, and modeling to extrapolate near real-time carbon flux monitoring to larger areas, using the old-growth temperate forests of Chilean Patagonia as a case study. Our approach delivers high-resolution aboveground biomass carbon density (30 m) and net ecosystem exchange (NEE, 30 m—30 min) estimates using flux tower data. By integrating ground-based flux measurements with high-resolution remote sensing, the proposed methodology constrains model parameters and spatial extrapolation, thereby reducing uncertainty relative to conventional inventory-based approaches. Our approach offers a replicable framework for informing climate policy, conservation planning, and emerging nature-based finance instruments while meeting operational needs in terms of scalability, technological integration, reproducibility, and traceability. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13021-025-00381-6.