This week was intense at COP30 Brazil in Belém — a crucial space for connecting climate ambition, industrial innovation, and food security.
Atlas Agro’s presence reinforces our commitment to decarbonizing the fertilizer supply chain, boosting green hydrogen in Brazil, and strengthening national autonomy in agricultural inputs.
We participated in decisive debates for the future of agriculture and climate, such as:
🌱 Farming for the Future (The Economist)
Discussion on how to increase global productivity by 2050 while preserving ecosystems — a strategic theme for Brazil.
💰 Mobilizing Capital for Climate Projects in Brazil (BNDES, ABVCAP & SB COP)
Dialogue on how to align public, private, and international capital to unlock up to R$ 70 billion in low-carbon projects.
♻️ Visit to the Muaná community with Siemens Energy
A valuable experience to understand the energy challenges in the Amazon.
Decentralized generation and its direct impact on people’s daily lives provide relevant insights that we can take to Atlas Agro — reinforcing more sustainable, resilient projects connected to local realities.
🏭 Panel at Embrapa / Agrizone: Decarbonization and Circular Economy in Agriculture — The Role of CEFENP
We presented how CEFENP is supporting the acceleration of the energy transition and industrial innovation.
Our UGF Project — Uberaba Green Fertilizer — is a concrete example:
- Replacement of fossil nitrates with locally produced renewable ammonium nitrate;
- Reduction of over 1 million tCO₂e/year;
- Strengthening Brazilian sovereignty in fertilizers;
- Formation of a new industrial hub based on green hydrogen, circularity, and responsible management.
CEFENP connects science, policy, and investment so that projects like UGF can happen on a large scale—not in isolation.
More news next week.
Atlas Agro’s participation in COP30 reinforces our mission: to produce fertilizers cleanly, safely, and competitively, with a positive impact on Brazil and the world.
“UGF is where clean power becomes clean food”















