Building a Sustainable Macauba-based Silvopastoral System and Value Chain in Brazil

Countries
Region
Latin America and the Caribbean
Country Grouping
Least Developed Countries (LDCs)
Climate Objective
Cross-cutting
Planning and Implementation Activity
Financing Implementation
Sectors and Themes
Agriculture
Forestry and Other Land Use
Barriers Overcome
Financial
Source
Climate Investment Funds (CIF)
Language
English
Case Summary

This case study examines a project to develop a macauba-based silvopastoral system and value chain in Brazil. The project was funded in part by the Climate Investment Funds’ (CIF) Forest Investment Program (FIP) through the Multilateral Investment Fund of the Inter-American Development Bank (MIF/IDB) Lab.

The macauba palm tree, native to Brazil, is a productive, oil-producing plant with high potential for biofuel production, especially in dry tropical regions. The macauba tree could produce oil to sustainably meet rising Brazilian and global biofuel demand without the need for clearing more land, and without reducing pastures for cattle grazing. Also, the macauba offers a complementary income for coffee harvesters in the region, as the macauba harvest (October to January) takes place after the coffee harvest.

The project’s executing agency is a private start-up company called INOCAS, a spin-off from a European Union-funded research project on biofuels for the airline industry. After a successful feasibility study between 2012 and 2014, the project started implementation in 2017.

The project intends to establish 2,000 hectares of silvopastoral macauba plantations with 300 trees per hectare, collect 1,500 tons of macauba fruits per year, sequester 300,000 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, and train 120 farmers on agroforestry systems.

Further Information

Case study author(s)

Rocio Sanz Cortes (CIF), Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), INOCAS (Private Sector)

Year Published
2020