• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

fundsforNGOs News

Grants and Resources for Sustainability

  • Subscribe for Free
  • Premium Support
  • Premium Login
  • Premium Sign up
  • Home
  • Funds for NGOs
    • Agriculture, Food and Nutrition
    • Animals and Wildlife
    • Arts and Culture
    • Children
    • Civil Society
    • Community Development
    • COVID
    • Democracy and Good Governance
    • Disability
    • Economic Development
    • Education
    • Employment and Labour
    • Environmental Conservation and Climate Change
    • Family Support
    • Healthcare
    • HIV and AIDS
    • Housing and Shelter
    • Humanitarian Relief
    • Human Rights
    • Human Service
    • Information Technology
    • LGBTQ
    • Livelihood Development
    • Media and Development
    • Narcotics, Drugs and Crime
    • Old Age Care
    • Peace and Conflict Resolution
    • Poverty Alleviation
    • Refugees, Migration and Asylum Seekers
    • Science and Technology
    • Sports and Development
    • Sustainable Development
    • Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
    • Women and Gender
  • Funds for Companies
    • Accounts and Finance
    • Agriculture, Food and Nutrition
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Education
    • Energy
    • Environment and Climate Change
    • Healthcare
    • Innovation
    • Manufacturing
    • Media
    • Research Activities
    • Startups and Early-Stage
    • Sustainable Development
    • Technology
    • Travel and Tourism
    • Women
    • Youth
  • Funds for Individuals
    • All Individuals
    • Artists
    • Disabled Persons
    • LGBTQ Persons
    • PhD Holders
    • Researchers
    • Scientists
    • Students
    • Women
    • Writers
    • Youths
  • Funds in Your Country
    • Funds in Australia
    • Funds in Bangladesh
    • Funds in Belgium
    • Funds in Canada
    • Funds in Switzerland
    • Funds in Cameroon
    • Funds in Germany
    • Funds in the United Kingdom
    • Funds in Ghana
    • Funds in India
    • Funds in Kenya
    • Funds in Lebanon
    • Funds in Malawi
    • Funds in Nigeria
    • Funds in the Netherlands
    • Funds in Tanzania
    • Funds in Uganda
    • Funds in the United States
    • Funds within the United States
      • Funds for US Nonprofits
      • Funds for US Individuals
      • Funds for US Businesses
      • Funds for US Institutions
    • Funds in South Africa
    • Funds in Zambia
    • Funds in Zimbabwe
  • Proposal Writing
    • How to write a Proposal
    • Sample Proposals
      • Agriculture
      • Business & Entrepreneurship
      • Children
      • Climate Change & Diversity
      • Community Development
      • Democracy and Good Governance
      • Disability
      • Disaster & Humanitarian Relief
      • Environment
      • Education
      • Healthcare
      • Housing & Shelter
      • Human Rights
      • Information Technology
      • Livelihood Development
      • Narcotics, Drugs & Crime
      • Nutrition & Food Security
      • Poverty Alleviation
      • Sustainable Develoment
      • Refugee & Asylum Seekers
      • Rural Development
      • Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
      • Women and Gender
  • News
    • Q&A
  • Premium
    • Premium Log-in
    • Premium Webinars
    • Premium Support
  • Contact
    • Submit Your Grant
    • About us
    • FAQ
    • NGOs.AI
You are here: Home / cat / Turning Land-Use Risk into Business Value: Lessons from Brazil’s Agroforestry Sector

Turning Land-Use Risk into Business Value: Lessons from Brazil’s Agroforestry Sector

Dated: January 21, 2026

For many companies with agricultural supply chains, land use occupies an uneasy space in sustainability strategies. It is often framed as a reputational risk, a compliance requirement, or a distant emissions issue rather than a core business concern. Over time, this has resulted in a proliferation of pilots, pledges, and projects that rarely address the underlying economics of how agricultural commodities are produced.

This approach is becoming increasingly precarious. As climate impacts intensify and due-diligence expectations tighten, land-use risk is no longer abstract. It is already manifesting as supply disruptions, price volatility, community conflict, and growing regulatory exposure.

Against this backdrop, an emerging agroforestry model in Brazil offers a compelling alternative.

In a country where land use accounts for a significant share of emissions and decades of deforestation have left large areas of degraded, unproductive farmland, a new generation of businesses is demonstrating that restoring landscapes can also strengthen livelihoods and supply chains. This is neither charity nor a carbon offset exercise. It represents a climate transition that is grounded in commercial logic.

At its core is a simple but powerful idea: when food systems are redesigned to work with nature rather than against it, and when producers are treated as partners rather than inputs, forests and farmers can reinforce one another instead of competing for land and resources.

A clear illustration of this approach can be seen in Belterra, a Brazilian agroforestry startup founded in 2019. Instead of acquiring land or imposing top-down production models, Belterra works through structured partnerships with farmers and landowners. Farmers retain ownership of their land, while agroforestry systems are co-designed collaboratively. Belterra provides upfront capital, seedlings, technical assistance, and access to markets, and revenues are shared based on investment and labour contributions.

This structure is critical because it is designed to solve practical challenges rather than promote regeneration as an abstract ideal. It addresses the difficulty of making agroforestry economically viable during the early years when trees and crops are still maturing and cash flow is limited. It ensures farmers have a genuine stake in the transition instead of bearing the risks while others capture the rewards. It also connects restored land to reliable markets at scale.

Belterra achieves this through a combination of revenue-sharing arrangements, land leasing, blended finance, and long-term offtake agreements. In some cases, the company leases degraded pasture from landowners, restores it into a productive agroforest, and returns it after a fixed period. In others, it partners directly with smallholders who co-invest upfront costs in exchange for a share of future revenues. In every scenario, land remains under local ownership.

For corporate practitioners, the significance of this model lies not in the crops themselves. Agroforestry has existed for centuries. The real innovation is in how risk, reward, and agency are distributed across the value chain.

Agroforestry fundamentally differs from monoculture systems by replacing uniformity with diversity. Trees and food crops are layered to mimic natural ecosystems, improving soil moisture retention and fertility while spreading production across the year. Crops mature at different times, reducing reliance on a single harvest and lowering vulnerability to climate shocks.

The business implications are substantial. Over time, yields become more stable and incomes more diversified. Farms are less exposed to droughts, pests, and price fluctuations. In Brazil, Belterra’s agroforestry systems are generating higher and more stable net income compared to degraded cattle pasture or monocropped land, driven by multiple revenue streams, lower input dependence, and continuous harvests. At the same time, these systems sequester carbon and restore soils and biodiversity.

One of the most overlooked benefits, however, is social stability. When farmers can earn a dignified living from land they already own, the pressure to clear new forests diminishes. When income begins within the first few years rather than after a long wait, adoption increases. When knowledge spreads peer to peer, uptake accelerates. In Belterra’s projects, early adopters often become trainers for neighbouring farms, extending the impact well beyond the initial sites.

For companies reliant on agricultural inputs, this stability is not incidental. Secure livelihoods reduce conflict risk, resilient farming systems lower supply volatility, and long-term partnerships reduce exposure to sudden regulatory or reputational shocks related to deforestation or labour practices. This is where business resilience and human rights considerations converge. Models that respect land rights, share value fairly, and give producers real agency tend to be more durable because they are less likely to generate grievances, disputes, or project failure. They also align more closely with emerging human-rights due-diligence requirements.

Several large corporations are already engaging with this approach. Companies such as Cargill are financing and sourcing cacao from agroforestry systems in Brazil, linking reliable demand with landscape restoration. Natura has embedded agroforestry into its sourcing strategy through carbon insetting, reducing emissions within its own value chain while strengthening supplier resilience. Amazon has supported large-scale agroforestry initiatives tied to high-integrity carbon standards, with farmers organised into associations that retain control over land and production decisions.

What unites these efforts is not carbon accounting but procurement design. These companies are not simply paying for trees to be planted; they are committing to purchase what the land produces and to support a different production model. This commitment alters the economics of restoration by providing early liquidity, signalling demand for diversified regenerative commodities, and embedding farmer agency into supply chains.

There are, of course, risks to manage. Land rights, community consent, and benefit sharing are critical concerns, and carbon markets have a mixed track record. The Brazilian experience shows that governance choices matter. When farmers retain land ownership, contracts are transparent, and carbon revenue complements rather than dominates the business case, these risks can be reduced.

Despite its potential, agroforestry remains far from mainstream. The barriers are largely political rather than technical. Public policies continue to favour monoculture agriculture, with subsidies, credit systems, and extension services designed around single crops and short production cycles. In Brazil, substantial public funds still support industrial cattle and soy operations, while regenerative systems receive limited backing. Insecure land tenure further constrains scale, particularly for smallholders, Indigenous communities, and Quilombola groups who lack formal titles and access to finance.

Finance itself poses another challenge. Agroforestry requires patience, as returns accumulate over several years rather than quarters. Conventional agricultural loans are poorly suited to this reality. Blended finance can help bridge the gap, but only when public or philanthropic capital is willing to absorb early risk, as seen in Belterra’s case. Market infrastructure also lags, as global supply chains remain optimised for uniform commodities rather than the diverse outputs that regenerative systems produce.

For businesses, the risk of inaction is continued lock-in to fragile agricultural models. Each year of investment in monoculture-based supply chains makes the eventual transition to resilient food systems more costly and disruptive.

Brazil’s experience offers clear lessons for corporate practitioners. Treating land use as productive infrastructure rather than a distant emissions issue delivers the greatest returns. The design of partnerships, contracts, and risk-sharing arrangements determines whether initiatives scale or stall. Strategic use of procurement power through long-term offtake agreements can unlock transition more effectively than one-off grants. Engagement with policy and enabling environments is essential if regenerative models are to move beyond niche applications. Above all, farmers must remain central as partners with agency and expertise, not passive beneficiaries.

Agroforestry is not a universal solution and cannot replace all forms of agriculture. However, in tropical regions where deforestation, degraded land, and rural poverty intersect, it offers one of the clearest pathways to align climate action with economic development. Brazil’s example shows that a just transition in agriculture does not require farmers to sacrifice for the planet. Instead, it involves building systems where restoring land and improving livelihoods is the most rational and profitable choice.

Ultimately, this model demonstrates that ecosystem restoration, resilient livelihoods, and secure supply chains are not opposing goals. In today’s climate-constrained economy, they are increasingly inseparable and, for both small farmers and large corporations, business-critical.

Related Posts

  • Wildfire Prevention Insights from the Mediterranean: The Role of Active Management and Local Communities
  • UVM Report Showcases GAFSP Agroecology Projects in Haiti, Honduras, and Senegal
  • Measuring Circular Food Systems in Practice: Lessons Learned from Rwanda
  • $50 Million Gift: Indian Developer Boosts The Rotary Foundation’s Humanitarian Work
  • Biopesticides at Scale: Lessons from India’s FARM Project

Primary Sidebar

Latest News

Afghan Education Strengthened Through UNESCO Support to NGOs

FIFA Foundation Steps Up Aid for Hurricane Melissa Victims

£250,000 Grant Opens for Community and Creative Projects in Belfast

What Oregon’s Transport Funding Struggles Teach the Nation

Key Insights from Running AMP & RCPP Agricultural Programs

Inspiring African Youth Success Stories in Governance and Peacebuilding

Andean Agriculture: Slopes That Sustain the World

A Decade of EU Research for Sustainable Agri-Food

Antonio Guterres Raises Alarm Over Global Human Rights Abuses

Moldova’s Green Transition: Why Local Solutions Matter

Ukraine Recovery: $588 Billion Needed Over 10 Years

Updated Report Reveals Ukraine’s $588B Reconstruction Needs

Apply Now: Green Assist Supports Green Investment Initiatives

EU/Israel: Calls Grow for Palestinians’ Rights to Lead Peace Agenda

Finland Grants €20M to Strengthen Humanitarian Response in Ukraine

Advancing Adolescent Health in Central and West Africa

Introducing the GSMA Innovation Fund for Sustainable Mobile Solutions

Leading the Fight Against AMR: Ghana Advances People-Focused Strategies in Africa

WHO Hosts Global Experts in Brazzaville to Boost Filovirus Clinical Care

UN Alerts: 280,000 Displaced Amid Escalating South Sudan Fighting

Ministers Celebrate Key Step Forward for Endangered Bird Conservation

20 Years of the Maritime Labour Convention: Ensuring Workers’ Rights at Sea

Asia Migrant Workers Struggle in Fishing and Seafood Processing

Updated Report: Ukraine’s Recovery and Reconstruction Needs

World Bank Partnership Boosts Job Creation in Papua New Guinea

Congo Basin Countries Chart Carbon Market Strategies

Malawi Economy Outlook: Unlocking Private Sector Growth

Timor-Leste Uses Data-Driven Census to Boost Social Protection and Reduce Child Stunting

SME Success Stories Worldwide: Insights Nepal Can Adopt (II)

Small Grants, Big Lessons: Sustainability in Global Health

Lessons from Three Megadiverse Countries on Biodiversity Protection

RAIN Challenge Insights: Driving Innovation for Climate Resilience

$10 Million Fund to Advance AI Designed By and For People

Albania and UK Exchange Best Practices on Constituency Engagement

Why Strong Education Systems Drive Life Skills Development

Georgia Advances Aquaculture with National Fish Traceability Integration

FAO Assists Tuvalu in Launching First National Crops and Livestock Census

Climate-Smart Equipment Strengthens Dryland Farming and Restores Landscapes

Miombo Woodland Restoration in Zimbabwe Boosted by FAO Training

Deaf Farmers in Egypt Boost Yields Through Adapted Field Schools

Funds for NGOs
Funds for Companies
Funds for Media
Funds for Individuals
Sample Proposals

Contact us
Submit a Grant
Advertise, Guest Posting & Backlinks
Fight Fraud against NGOs
About us

Terms of Use
Third-Party Links & Ads
Disclaimers
Copyright Policy
General
Privacy Policy

Premium Sign in
Premium Sign up
Premium Customer Support
Premium Terms of Service

©FUNDSFORNGOS LLC.   fundsforngos.org, fundsforngos.ai, and fundsforngospremium.com domains and their subdomains are the property of FUNDSFORNGOS, LLC 1018, 1060 Broadway, Albany, New York, NY 12204, United States.   Unless otherwise specified, this website is not affiliated with the abovementioned organizations. The material provided here is solely for informational purposes and without any warranty. Visitors are advised to use it at their discretion. Read the full disclaimer here. Privacy Policy. Cookie Policy.