Environics Analytics is joining GeoIgnite 2026 as a Silver Sponsor, supporting Canada’s national geospatial leadership conference and contributing to conversations around location intelligence, analytics, and data-driven decision making across the geospatial sector.
Organizations working at the intersection of spatial data and analytics continue to play an important role in how governments, businesses, and institutions understand demographic, economic, and geographic change.
Environics Analytics is a Canadian data and analytics company specializing in location intelligence, demographic analysis, market segmentation, and consumer insight tools used across both public and private sectors.
GeoIgnite 2026 will take place May 11–13 at the Ottawa Conference and Event Centre in Ottawa, Canada. Environics Analytics’ work supports applications in urban planning, retail analysis, public services, infrastructure strategy, transportation, and community development through the integration of geographic and statistical data.
As geospatial technologies become increasingly connected to AI, digital infrastructure, and operational planning, organizations such as Environics Analytics help expand how spatial intelligence is applied in practical decision environments. Their participation reflects the growing importance of analytics and location-based insight within Canada’s broader geospatial ecosystem and the cross-sector discussions taking place at GeoIgnite.
“GeoIgnite brings together organizations working across the full spectrum of Canada’s geospatial ecosystem, from mapping and Earth observation to analytics and decision support,” said Jonathan Murphy, Founder and CEO of GoGeomatics Canada. “The participation of companies like Environics Analytics helps strengthen the national dialogue around how geospatial intelligence is being applied across industry, government, and infrastructure planning.”
GeoIgnite is Canada’s national geospatial leadership conference, bringing together leaders from government, industry, academia, defence, and Indigenous organizations to examine the technologies, partnerships, and policies shaping the future of geospatial capability in Canada.

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