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Brazil's Agrotools builds world's largest environmental services payment platform

Agrotools is a Brazilian agricultural data service firm that will?complete building what they claim will be the largest platform in the world for payment of environment services, after securing an subsidized loan from the government, said a senior executive this week.

Bernardo 'Pires, government relations manager at the firm, explained in an interview that the platform allows farmers receive lease payments at market rates in exchange for maintaining native vegetation on their land.

Businesses and governments that are required to reduce their carbon footprint will provide the money, which they will then share with farmers from a region considered one of the world's biggest carbon sinks.

According to Agrotools, in Brazil, there are 280 million hectares of native vegetation on private farms. According to Agrotools, around?70 millions hectares of land can be cleared legally. Of that, 30,000,000 hectares have "high agricultural aptitude", with suitable soil, climate, and logistics conditions.

Agrotools bets that farmers prefer leasing income over planting crops or raising livestock in biomes sensitive to climate change, such as the Amazon or the Cerrado Savannah. This way they can avoid credit risk and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Pires said, "This is what farmers have always wanted." "To be paid for environmental services."

After global grain traders left a conservation pact in the Amazon to maintain tax incentives in Brazil's largest farming state, pressure has increased to clear more land. Pires says that, combined with?low commodities prices and expensive loans and inputs and inputs and inputs and the ripe moment to launch this platform.

Brazil is a major food exporter to China, the U.S., and Europe. Soy and beef are two of the main drivers for deforestation.

Agrotools platform could attract 15 billion dollars in investment over the next five years. This would preserve an agricultural area seven times larger than the Netherlands. Pires stated that the value of the land is based on an annual lease payment of $100 per hectare for native vegetation.

The government's Eco Invest program approved funding for two Agrotools projects, including the platform to pay for environmental services.

(source: Reuters)