According to a recent LinkedIn post from Boomitra, the company’s Verra-approved Northern Mexico Grassland Restoration Project is being applied at Don Tachín Ranch to intensify rotational grazing. The post describes how the ranch reportedly expanded from three paddocks to more than 100 using solar-powered electric fencing, enabling more frequent cattle moves and extended rest periods for each paddock.
Claim 55% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
As described in the post, this shift is associated with visible improvements in vegetation cover, grass productivity, and the return of 45 native grass species over four years. The post suggests that enhanced forage and herd performance can align with soil carbon outcomes, implying a potential proof point for Boomitra’s carbon removal model and the generation of carbon credits tied to regenerative agriculture.
For investors, the example may indicate increasing scalability and verifiability of Boomitra’s project-based approach under established standards such as Verra, which is important for credit issuance and market acceptance. Demonstrated co-benefits in biodiversity and productivity could strengthen the firm’s value proposition to landowners and credit buyers, potentially supporting revenue growth in the voluntary carbon and nature-based solutions markets.

