Verde AgriTech has signed an exclusive agreement with UK‑based UNDO to create and sell carbon removal credits from enhanced rock weathering in Brazil. Announced on November 17, 2025, the pact sets a framework for project development, measurement, and credit sales tied to Verde’s glauconitic siltstone and farm networks.
The partners say the programme could remove hundreds of thousands of tonnes of carbon dioxide if executed at scale. Monitoring and verification will sit at the centre of delivery and buyer trust. Execution now moves from framework to field.
Exclusive path to ERW monetization
The deal gives UNDO a dedicated feedstock and operating base in Brazil, while Verde gains access to an established carbon credit developer and buyer relationships. The partners plan to align on measurement, reporting, and verification so credits qualify under leading enhanced rock weathering standards, with sales to follow. Verde frames the move as a new revenue line alongside fertilizer output and logistics services.
“Today’s exclusive agreement with UNDO creates a clear path to turn Verde’s Enhanced Rock Weathering activities into a scalable revenue stream,” said Cristiano Veloso.
Undo brings a technology platform and proprietary protocols to track field operations and quantify captured carbon in soils and waters. High‑integrity measurement matters because buyers now demand clear proof of permanence and low uncertainty before signing multi‑year contracts. UNDO’s profile gained visibility after it was named among the winners in April 2025 in the XPRIZE Carbon Removal competition.
The team stresses practical scale, using existing farm equipment and supply chains to speed deployment. “we’re creating a blueprint for scaling durable carbon removal,” said Jim Mann, UNDO’s founder and chief executive.
Next steps and delivery risks
The key will be how quickly credits move from field trials to verified issuance and payment. The partners still need to confirm volumes, prices, verification bodies, and delivery schedules, which are the levers that turn pilots into cash flow.
Farm adoption, trucking, and soil sampling capacity will influence cost and speed in Brazil’s key growing regions. Market risk remains, since credit prices and standards continue to evolve as buyers tighten quality screens. If the execution holds, the pact could seed a durable supply of removal credits that fits with existing farming, while giving carbon markets another test case at scale.
