
108 ha
Area
534 t
CO₂
0 t
Available CO₂
This agricultural project on 108 hectares in the municipality of BILLÉ implements responsible practices designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase carbon storage in soils, contributing to sequester 534 tons of CO₂ over its lifetime. Certified by the CARBON AGRI method of the Low-Carbon Label, it promotes more resilient and sustainable agricultural ecosystems.
Specific practices implemented by the farmer to reduce emissions and increase carbon storage.

Augmenter la durée et la qualité du pâturage permet aux vaches de se nourrir directement de l'herbe plutôt que de fourrages récoltés et de concentrés. Le pâturage bien conduit maintient les prairies en bon état et réduit les coûts d'alimentation.
Did you know?
Le saviez-vous ? Une vache au pâturage consomme zéro litre de carburant pour son alimentation — pas de récolte, pas de transport, pas de distribution. Le pâturage est le mode d'alimentation le plus sobre en énergie.

L'autonomie protéique consiste à produire sur la ferme les protéines nécessaires à l'alimentation du troupeau, plutôt que d'acheter du tourteau de soja importé. Cela passe par la culture de colza, féverole, luzerne ou pois, et par l'optimisation des fourrages.
Did you know?
Le saviez-vous ? Pour produire 1 kg de tourteau de soja importé du Brésil, il faut déforester 3 m² de savane du Cerrado. Remplacer ce soja par de la féverole locale supprime cette empreinte.

Améliorer la qualité des fourrages (meilleure valeur énergétique UFL, plus de protéines MAT) permet de réduire la quantité de concentrés achetés et de mieux valoriser les ressources de la ferme. Un fourrage récolté au bon stade nourrit mieux et réduit le gaspillage.
Did you know?
Le saviez-vous ? Un foin récolté au bon stade (début épiaison) contient 30 % d'énergie en plus qu'un foin récolté trop tard. Cette différence se traduit directement en moins de méthane émis par la vache.
Beyond carbon sequestration, each project generates measurable positive impacts on the environment and local communities. Here is the detailed assessment of this project.
This project sequesters 4.9 tCO₂/ha over its lifetime. Carbon is captured in biomass (trunks, branches, roots) and soils. This is the project's primary impact: contributing to climate change mitigation by removing CO₂ from the atmosphere.
This project creates a rich habitat for wildlife. The ecological corridors formed allow species to circulate, promoting pollination and natural biological pest control.
Over 108 ha, the vegetation cover acts as a natural filter. Roots promote water infiltration into soils, reduce runoff and erosion, and enable groundwater recharge. Downstream water quality is directly improved.
The root system structures the soil in depth. Litter (dead leaves, twigs) enriches organic matter, feeds soil microorganisms and increases water retention capacity. A living, fertile soil is the foundation of a resilient ecosystem.
This project of 108 ha in BILLÉ supports the local economy: direct jobs (planting, maintenance, monitoring), enhancement of the territory and natural heritage. It strengthens the link between rural communities and their environment, contributing to the ecological transition.
The 17 SDGs are a global framework defined by the United Nations to build a sustainable future by 2030. This project directly contributes to 4 of them. Here's why.
Zero Hunger
End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition
Why this project: With 108 ha of sustainable farming practices in BILLÉ, this project improves long-term soil productivity, secures food yields and strengthens farm resilience against climate risks — directly contributing to local food security.
Responsible Consumption and Production
Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns
Why this project: This project transforms farming practices on 108 ha towards more responsible production: reduced chemical inputs, soil cover, crop diversification.
Climate Action
Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts
Why this project: This is the primary impact: this project sequesters 534 tons of CO2 over its lifetime, certified by the Low-Carbon Label. Every ton removed from the atmosphere directly contributes to fighting climate change.
Life on Land
Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems
Why this project: By reintroducing soil-friendly practices (cover crops, hedges, reduced tillage), this project restores terrestrial life on 108 ha.
Project notification
April 26, 2022The project owner submits their application to the ministry.
File submission
December 21, 2022The complete file is submitted to the competent authority for review.
Labelling
March 6, 2023The project is validated and receives the official Low-Carbon Label.
Year 1 monitoring
March 2024Project performance indicators check — year 1/5.
Year 2 monitoring
March 2025Project performance indicators check — year 2/5.
Year 3 monitoring
March 2026Project performance indicators check — year 3/5.
Year 4 monitoring
March 2027Project performance indicators check — year 4/5.
Year 5 monitoring
March 2028Project performance indicators check — year 5/5.
Verification audit
September 2027An independent auditor verifies on site that the project carbon objectives have been met.
Final certification
March 2028Emission reductions are verified and carbon credits are definitively issued.
Town
BILLÉ
Postal code
35133
Department
Ille et Vilaine (35)
Region
Bretagne
ODD
Impact score
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About the Label Bas-Carbone
The only carbon contribution label officially recognised by the French state. Every project is audited by an independent body and listed in the public registry.
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