LOADING

Type to search

Boomitra’s Carbon Farming Project in India Gains Verra Registration

Boomitra’s Carbon Farming Project in India Gains Verra Registration

Boomitra’s Carbon Farming Project in India Gains Verra Registratio

  • Verra registers Boomitra’s South of the Vindhyas project, covering 88,000 acres with more than 23,000 participating farmers.
  • The initiative is projected to remove 89,299 tonnes of CO₂ annually through regenerative soil practices measured via AI-enabled monitoring.
  • Partnerships with 30+ agribusinesses and farmer groups broaden access to carbon markets for smallholders cultivating crops from sugarcane to cotton.

India’s Expanding Role in Soil Carbon Markets

Boomitra has secured Verra registration for its Carbon Farming South of the Vindhyas (SOVIN) initiative, marking the company’s fifth registered project worldwide and its first in India under the VM0042 soil carbon methodology. The registration gives India’s smallholder farmers a pathway to generate verified carbon credits and access climate finance streams that were previously out of reach.

More than 23,000 farmers across 88,000 acres are enrolled in the program. By adopting regenerative practices such as intercropping, composting, residue management, and minimal tillage, participants are expected to collectively remove nearly 90,000 tonnes of CO₂ each year.

Boomitra’s founder and chief executive, Aadith Moorthy, described the development as a turning point for farmer participation in carbon markets. “If we don’t reach the world’s smallest farmers, we won’t solve climate change. With this project, we’re proving that’s possible at scale,” he said.

Boomitra’s founder and chief executive, Aadith Moorthy

Partnerships Across the Agricultural Value Chain

The SOVIN project is supported by more than 30 local organizations spanning agriculture, textiles, and sustainability services. Partners include Agribolo, Avadh Sugar, the Center for Sustainable Agriculture, DCM Sriram, Pragmatix, and Welspun. These groups provide on-the-ground training and outreach, ensuring that farmers from diverse sectors—sugarcane, cotton, rice, pulses, soybean, maize, and groundnut—can adopt practices that restore soil health while opening new income streams.

The collaboration builds on earlier initiatives, including Boomitra’s URVARA India project, which has already issued credits under the Social Carbon registry. By scaling across multiple states and crop systems, the company demonstrates replicability beyond pilot projects, a critical requirement for international investors and credit buyers.

Technology as an Enabler

A central feature of Boomitra’s approach is its AI-driven monitoring, reporting, and verification (MRV) system. Using satellite imagery, the platform tracks changes in soil organic carbon without requiring expensive field sampling. This lowers barriers for smallholder participation, since farmers with plots as small as one acre can be included in the Verra-approved framework.

The model also reduces administrative costs for carbon credit buyers, making transactions more efficient while maintaining environmental integrity. For Verra, which has faced growing scrutiny over methodological rigor, the integration of remote sensing and AI represents a test case for scaling carbon credit issuance in emerging economies.

RELATEDARTICLE: Boomitra Launches Biomass Carbon Removal Project in Botswana to Restore Land and Lock Away Carbon

Implications for Investors and Policymakers

For institutional investors, the registration broadens the supply of verified soil carbon credits from the Global South, where climate finance flows have historically lagged. For policymakers, the initiative provides a template for linking agricultural livelihoods with India’s climate commitments under the Paris Agreement, particularly its target of creating carbon sinks through improved land management.

The project’s scale also highlights the intersection of agribusiness and ESG objectives. Companies sourcing cotton, sugar, and other crops from India are under pressure to decarbonize supply chains, and participation in initiatives like SOVIN may offer both compliance benefits and reputational gains.

Global Context

Boomitra’s latest registration adds weight to the broader debate on how carbon markets can be designed to include small producers in emerging economies. With soil health declining across Asia and Africa, scalable models that channel climate finance directly to farmers are gaining traction.

As carbon markets mature and scrutiny intensifies, the ability to combine credible measurement systems with grassroots participation will shape which projects attract long-term finance. In this context, Boomitra’s progress in India is less about a single registration and more about testing a replicable model for climate finance inclusion.

Follow ESG News on LinkedIn

Topics

Related Articles

LOADING

Type to search

Blog

Global Taskforce Sets Out Plan to Bridge $4 Trillion Sustainability Finance Gap for SMEs
EU Lawmakers Scale Back Sustainability Rules, Raising Thresholds for Corporate Reporting and Due Diligence
Schroders Achieves 100% Renewable Electricity Across Global Operations One Year Ahead of Schedule
Mercedes F1 Nears Net Zero Goal with 99% Biofuel Logistics Coverage Across Europe
Moeve Joins Avelia as First External SAF Supplier
Google to Invest €5 Billion in Belgium to Expand AI and Carbon-Free Infrastructure by 2027
Climate Fund Managers Closes $1.07 Billion Climate Adaptation Fund for Emerging Markets
Mexico Adopts 17 Climate-Aligned Legal Clauses to Advance Sustainable Law Frameworks
EU Launches $6.1M Initiative to Scale Sustainable Algae Farming and Blue Innovation Hubs
India Plans $77B Hydropower Expansion as Strategic Buffer to China’s Upstream Dams
US Pushes Back Against EU Plan to Cut Global Shipping Emissions
Siemens, Airbus Partner to Decarbonize Three UK Manufacturing Sites by 2030
INC Introduces First Global Sustainability Certification for Nut and Dried Fruit Industry
US Delays Wyoming Coal Lease Auction Following Weak Industry Interest in Montana
ESG News Week In Review: 3 October - 12 October
Worldly Acquires GoBlu to Build Unified Sustainability Data Ecosystem for Global Supply Chains
US Declines to Back World Bank Climate Statement Signed by 19 Directors
Highland Spring Partners with Altruistiq to Track Product-Level Carbon Footprints Across UK Operations
Base Power Secures $1B to scale U.S. Home Battery Network
Deep Sky to Build 500,000-Tonne Carbon Removal Facility in Canada
","session_id":"ep-sess-1760932446-jHhOELK7","page_url":"https:\/\/esgnews.com\/boomitras-carbon-farming-project-in-india-gains-verra-registration\/","post_id":"38338","tracking_enabled":"1","original_referrer":"","has_embedded_content":""}; /* ]]> */