According to a recent LinkedIn post from Boomitra, the company is spotlighting practical carbon farming activities in Kenya, including composting, residue retention, and cover cropping as methods to rebuild degraded soils. The post also points to an open invitation for stakeholders to visit its carbon projects on the ground.
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The company’s LinkedIn post highlights a new research paper produced with the Indian Institute of Science that examines scientific, technical, and market requirements to scale carbon farming with rigor and credibility. For investors, this emphasis on field implementation and research-backed methodology suggests Boomitra is positioning itself as a technically robust player in the carbon markets segment.
The post suggests that demonstrating real-world project activity alongside peer-reviewed style research could help strengthen buyer confidence in carbon credits associated with regenerative agriculture. If this approach supports higher-quality credits and improved verification, it may enhance Boomitra’s ability to attract institutional partners, command premium pricing, and support long-term revenue growth in the voluntary carbon market.

