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Carbon Credits in Brazil: How the New Regulatory Cycle Unlocks Strategic Opportunities for Companies

By Laís Victor – Renewable Energy Specialist and Executive Director of Partnerships


The carbon agenda is no longer a niche environmental debate. It has become a central pillar of corporate strategy, influencing investment decisions, access to international markets, capital costs and even a company’s long-term competitiveness.


Carbon Credits in Brazil: How the New Regulatory Cycle Unlocks Strategic Opportunities for Companies
Carbon Credits in Brazil: How the New Regulatory Cycle Unlocks Strategic Opportunities for Companies

In a global landscape defined by ambitious emission-reduction targets, carbon is now treated as an economic asset one capable of generating value or accelerating financial and reputational risks.


Brazil has entered a new chapter with the creation of the Brazilian Emissions Trading System (SBCE), established by Law No. 15,042 of December 2024. More than a regulatory milestone, the SBCE represents a structural shift that directly impacts industrial sectors, investment flows and Brazil’s position in the global low-carbon economy.


Companies that still treat carbon management as a secondary issue risk losing competitiveness in supply chains that increasingly demand measurable, auditable and transparently reported emission reductions.


Having followed this market closely, I frequently see confusion about how carbon trading works and, above all, how it can be used to generate business value. What is happening now is a turning point one that will reward early movers with structural advantages over the next decade.


From Voluntary to Regulated: The Shift Reshaping Brazil’s Carbon Market

For more than ten years, Brazil participated predominantly in the voluntary carbon market, driven by standards such as Verra, Gold Standard and ART/TREES. The country became a global reference in nature-based solutions, especially forest- and agriculture-based projects.


However, increased scrutiny since 2023 centered on transparency, permanence and environmental integrity revealed the need for stronger governance and standardized rules.

This is where the SBCE becomes transformative.


Brazil now moves toward a regulated market aligned with frameworks already adopted in the European Union, California and South Korea. The system is built on three key pillars:

  • Mandatory monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV) for high-emission sectors.

  • Legally binding emission-reduction targets, tightened progressively over time.

  • Tradable emission credits, allowing companies to meet obligations through internal reductions or credit purchases.


Globally, more than 70 carbon pricing mechanisms are already in force, covering around 20% of total emissions, according to the World Bank. Brazil enters this group with an exceptional competitive advantage: a diversified and abundant portfolio of natural and technological assets.

Among its key strengths:

  • a predominantly renewable electricity matrix

  • consolidated low-carbon agriculture

  • vast tropical forests

  • robust biofuels sector

  • growing energy-efficiency initiatives

  • emerging carbon capture and storage (CCUS) technologies


Together, these assets position Brazil not just as a compliant participant—but as a potential global supplier of climate solutions.


The Opportunity Most Companies Still Overlook

Many organizations still interpret the carbon market as a compliance burden. But this view obscures its real value.

A structured carbon strategy can:

  • reduce operational costs through efficiency measures

  • create new revenue streams

  • strengthen ESG positioning

  • improve access to green financing

  • increase competitiveness in international supply chains


Data from McKinsey shows that companies with solid decarbonization plans are twice as likely to attract foreign investment. Meanwhile, CDP reports that multinational corporations are already excluding suppliers without transparent emissions reporting.

In other words, carbon performance is no longer a differentiator it is a requirement for staying in business.


How Companies Can Help Shape This Emerging Market

No regulated market is born mature. Its quality depends heavily on private-sector engagement.

Regardless of size or industry, companies should follow a strategic sequence:

  1. Develop a robust emissions inventory.

  2. Identify internal reduction opportunities.

  3. Structure projects capable of generating credits.

  4. Integrate carbon planning into core business strategy.


Experience in the EU shows that companies that delayed action became overdependent on buying credits, increasing compliance costs and reducing operational flexibility.

Studies by the International Energy Agency reinforce this trend: early decarbonizers face significantly lower long-term compliance costs. Anticipation, therefore, is not only environmentally sound it is economically smart.


From Knowledge to Execution: The Urgency of the Next Step

Brazil has already made progress. In 2025, more than 1,300 corporate emissions inventories were published through the Brazilian GHG Protocol Program a record number. Still, most organizations remain in early stages, with declared targets but limited operational integration.


This gap between intention and action reveals a crucial window of opportunity. Companies capable of transforming technical knowledge into practical implementation will position themselves ahead of competitors in efficiency, innovation and reputation.


Carbon as the New Frontier of Business Competitiveness

The carbon market has evolved beyond environmental discourse. It is now a strategic economic variable capable of reshaping sectors, accelerating technological transitions and redirecting capital flows.


With the SBCE, Brazil begins a new cycle in which efficiency, innovation and emission reduction are transformed into economic assets. Companies that treat carbon not as an obligation, but as part of their long-term strategy, will be best positioned for the emerging low-carbon economy.


About the Author

Laís Victor is a renewable-energy specialist and Executive Director of Partnerships, with 15 years of experience across the energy sector. Her work includes business development, strategic alliances and investment support for energy-transition projects, focusing on building sustainable ecosystems and advancing global renewable-energy innovation.

If you would like, I can also provide:


Carbon Credits in Brazil: How the New Regulatory Cycle Unlocks Strategic Opportunities for Companies


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