According to a recent LinkedIn post from Sylvera, Chile is emerging as a leading Latin American market for Article 6.2 carbon transactions as its government moves from pledges to an operational framework. The post highlights that the Ministry of Environment has implemented Decree 32 of 2024 through five new resolutions, reportedly clarifying priority sectors, methodology validation requirements, and environmental and social integrity standards.
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The post also notes the formal creation of a National Article 6 Committee, which is presented as providing investors and project developers with a defined institutional counterpart for international carbon finance. In addition, Chile and Switzerland have authorized a fifth bilateral project, involving a 228 MW battery storage system in the Atacama region, suggesting growing cross-border activity linked to carbon markets and clean energy infrastructure.
According to the LinkedIn post, Chile is portrayed as a prime example of a jurisdiction proactively shaping a favorable environment for international carbon finance inflows. For Sylvera, which offers 58 updated country profiles tracking policy advances and market shifts, this type of regulatory progress could enhance the value proposition of its data and analytics platform for investors, developers, and financial institutions active in carbon markets.
If more countries follow Chile’s approach, as implied by the fully updated Q1 2026 coverage in Sylvera’s country profiles, demand for granular policy intelligence and risk assessment tools could increase. That dynamic may support Sylvera’s ability to deepen relationships with institutional clients, potentially improving recurring revenue prospects and reinforcing its position in the carbon and climate data analytics segment.

