Boomitra advanced several flagship soil carbon initiatives this week, underscoring its push into compliance-grade carbon markets and large-scale regenerative grazing projects. The company reported that its Mongolia soil carbon initiative, developed with Mitsubishi Corporation and in consultation with the Mongolian and Japanese governments, reached a No Objection Decision under Japan’s Joint Crediting Mechanism.
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The JCM milestone follows sustained technical engagement with public-sector stakeholders and is being positioned as evidence of the rigor behind Boomitra’s methodologies. By aligning the project with a government-backed crediting framework, Boomitra aims to strengthen the perceived integrity and bankability of its soil carbon credits for institutional and compliance-oriented buyers.
The Mongolian initiative centers on improved grazing management with herder communities and seeks to integrate traditional nomadic practices with modern sustainable techniques. The project is framed around co-benefits such as healthier rangelands, stronger herder livelihoods, and measurable climate impact, and is linked to the U.N.’s International Year of Rangelands and Pastoralists to align with global policy themes.
In parallel, Boomitra highlighted its participation in Verra’s first VM0042 Technical Workshop in Barcelona, where its lead scientist contributed to discussions on eligibility criteria, baselines, additionality, quantification, and monitoring standards. This engagement reinforces the company’s role in shaping high-integrity methodologies for agricultural land management and soil carbon projects.
Boomitra emphasized that its Northern Mexico Grassland Restoration Project is the largest soil carbon project issued under Verra’s VM0042 and the first in North America using this standard. Earlier this year, the project achieved issuance of 3.03 million carbon removal credits, and ranching families across roughly 4 million acres have begun receiving payments, with at least 75% of gross carbon revenue directed to ranchers and local partners.
The company also reported progress in its Paraguay-based South America Grassland Restoration Project, which recently hosted a delegation from Singapore led by Minister Grace Fu. Following a government-led RFP under Article 6.2 of the Paris Agreement, Boomitra was selected to deliver 625,000 soil carbon credits to Singapore, reportedly as the only soil-focused project among four awarded.
These developments collectively expand Boomitra’s portfolio of verified and compliance-linked soil carbon credits while deepening its engagement with standard setters and national governments. The week’s news suggests improved visibility with sovereign and corporate buyers, stronger policy alignment, and a growing track record that could support future project scaling and long-term revenue generation in nature-based carbon markets.

