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Surface scan

Human stories, not sectors

Where plastic becomes maps, and maps become hope

We work in places the cloud forgot: lagoons full of bags, camps with no signal, settlements where floods arrive before ambulances do.

Coastal communities

Where plastic chokes lagoons, CLITEDS pays collectors by the kilo and turns that feedstock into surge sensors and 3D shore maps. Fishers check layers before they launch; kids learn staging and fins in after-school rocket clinics.

Refugee camps

Across East Africa’s largest camps, 8700 learners have staged their first maps and rocket labs on offline tablets. Mesh carries alerts and homework where towers never reach.

Informal settlements

In dense wards and floodplains, CLITEDS sensors often stand in as the early-warning layer: solar when the grid drops, mesh speakers when handsets fail, aerospace kits when classrooms are scarce.