Advance low-carbon regenerative agriculture

Applied by
AmaggiAmaggi
In partnership with
    CEBDSCEBDS

Summary

Regenerative agriculture strategy improving soil health, biodiversity, and climate resilience through monitored low-carbon farming practices.

Context

Founded over 30 years ago, AMAGGI is proud of its positions on social and environmental management and sustainable development; resulting in contributions to agribusiness, respect for the environment and improving lives in the communities where it is active. Present in all Brazilian regions, as well as three European countries – Holland, Norway and Poland – besides Argentina and Paraguay, AMAGGI is engaged in agricultural and soybean seed production; origination, processing and commercialization of grains; fertilizer; energy and fluvial transport.

AMAGGI faces complex decarbonization challenges driven by the nature of large-scale agricultural operations, which significantly influence Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions. To advance its SBTi-approved climate ambition, the company recognized the need for a transition toward low-carbon agricultural systems while strengthening soil health, enhancing biodiversity, and building climate resilience across its production areas.

Location: Brazil (multiple farm regions)


Solution

AMAGGI implemented Amaggi Regenera, its regenerative agriculture strategy, to support the transition to low-carbon farming systems. The initiative began on the company’s own farm and, following positive results, scaled to additional AMAGGI farms and partner producers.

The strategy integrates:

  • Monitoring of quantitative soil health indicators (soil carbon, biodiversity, agricultural practices)

  • Adoption of regenerative practices (e.g., cover crops, reduced soil disturbance, integrated systems)

  • Knowledge dissemination to family farmers and rural producers

  • Partnerships with research institutions including Embrapa and other technical partners

Currently, the program spans 232,000 hectares, including 124,000 hectares of arable land.


Impact

Sustainability Impact

Climate

The initiative impacts Scope 1 and 2 emissions. Observed reductions:

  • Scope 1: 354.9 tCO₂e

  • Scope 2: 1,450.91 tCO₂e

Nature

Regenerative practices promote:

  • Increased soil organic matter

  • Improved water retention

  • Enhanced on-farm biodiversity

  • Reduced soil degradation and erosion

These measures contribute to healthier ecosystems and landscape-level resilience.

Social

The program supports knowledge-sharing among farming communities:

  • Training and field days for 15 family farmers

  • Knowledge dissemination to 70 participants, including rural producers and technical staff This strengthens local capacity, supports more resilient livelihoods, and builds long-term agronomic expertise.

Business Impact

Benefits
  • Improved soil productivity and long-term land health

  • Increased climate resilience of agricultural systems

  • Enhanced supply chain transparency through monitoring tools

  • Strengthened market positioning due to rising demand for regenerative products

Costs

Typical costs include:

  • Investments in soil monitoring tools and multidisciplinary technical teams

  • Costs associated with adapting farm operations to regenerative practices

  • Potential dependence on regional soil and climatic conditions

Costs are minimized by:

  • Leveraging partnerships (e.g., Embrapa)

  • Standardizing monitoring methodologies

  • Scaling practices across farms to reduce per-unit investment


Implementation

Typical Business Profile

This initiative is particularly relevant for:

  • Agricultural producers (grains, fibers, large-scale farming)

  • Companies with land-intensive operations

  • Supply chains dependent on regenerative or low-carbon products

  • Organizations with advanced net zero or nature-positive strategies

Approach

  • Pilot Implementation on a company-owned farm

  • Monitoring System Setup including soil carbon, biodiversity, and agronomic indicators

  • Scaling to additional farms and supply chain partners based on pilot results

  • Capacity Building through events for family farmers, rural producers, and technical teams

  • Partnership Integration with research institutions to validate and refine methodologies.

  • Market Engagement to build demand for regenerative products

Stakeholders Involved

  • Project Leads: Sustainability and agricultural operations teams

  • Company Functions: Agronomy, operations, procurement, sustainability

  • Main Providers: Technical partners, soil laboratories, monitoring system providers

  • Other Stakeholders: Embrapa, rural producers, family farming communities

Key Parameters to Consider

  • Initiative maturity: Established but still evolving with ongoing research

  • Implementation timeline: Multi-year deployment with phased scaling

  • Average lifetime: Continuous with annual monitoring cycles

  • Technical prerequisites: Reliable soil sampling, biodiversity indicators, trained agronomic teams

  • Geographic relevance: High relevance for tropical agricultural regions

  • Regulations/Subsidies: May benefit from national incentives for low-carbon agriculture

Implementation and Operations Tips

  • Ensure consistent integration of monitoring tools to track long-term impacts

  • Deploy multidisciplinary teams combining agronomy, sustainability, and data specialists

  • Promote strong stakeholder engagement to drive adoption across partner farms

  • Use partnerships with research institutions to validate methods and share best practices

  • Engage with markets early to help create demand for regenerative products


Going further