Carbono

Carbono

¿Qué es IP-COS?

30 dic 2025

En los últimos años, el carbono del suelo pasó de ser un concepto académico a un eje central de decisiones productivas, ambientales y financieras. Sin embargo, contar con mapas de carbono no alcanza: el verdadero desafío es identificar dónde el manejo puede generar carbono adicional, estable y verificable, y no solo reflejar señales climáticas o regionales.

A partir de mapas anuales de stock de Carbono Orgánico del Suelo (COS) y de su tasa de cambio en el tiempo, modelados mediante cartografía digital de suelos e información ambiental y satelital, construimos el IP-COS (Índice de Potencial de Carbono Orgánico del Suelo, 0–100).

El IP-COS es una herramienta de priorización espacial que responde a una pregunta clave:

¿Dónde hay mayor probabilidad de generar carbono adicional, estable y atribuible al manejo?

Para ello, el índice integra tres componentes complementarios:

🔹 S_add – Adicionalidad

Compara cada píxel con su entorno agrícola cercano (buffer) para distinguir cambios por el manejo de señales regionales (clima, contexto productivo).

🔹 S_trend – Tendencia

Evalúa la tasa de cambio del COS usando métodos robustos, como el Sen’s slope, evitando que los años extremos distorsionen el resultado.

🔹 S_stab – Estabilidad temporal

Penaliza las señales erráticas: un aumento de COS solo es relevante si es consistente a lo largo del tiempo.

El resultado es un índice de 0–100, que puede agruparse en clases (rojo → azul) para facilitar la interpretación.

🧭 ¿Cómo se interpreta?

IP-COS bajo (rojo) → baja adicionalidad o señales inestables

IP-COS medio (amarillo) → potencial moderado

IP-COS alto (verde–azul) → alta probabilidad de COS adicional, sostenido y atribuible al manejo

⚠ Importante: IP-COS no estima créditos ni certifica el carbono.

Es una herramienta de screening: indica dónde conviene mirar primero.


Resultados clave para la región agrícola argentina

Al aplicar el IP-COS a toda la región agrícola del país (~35 millones de ha) en el período 2021-2025, observamos que:

• ≈ 3,5 millones de ha se ubican en clase 4 (alto potencial)

• ≈ 4 millones de ha se ubican en clase 5 (muy alto potencial)

👉 Más de 7,5 millones de hectáreas con alta probabilidad de generar carbono adicional, estable y atribuible al manejo.

👉 ¿Sos productor y querés conocer el IP-COS de tu campo?

👉 ¿Sos desarrollador de proyectos de carbono y necesitás identificar dónde están las áreas con mayor potencial real?

Con AGILE Carbono e IP-COS convertimos datos complejos en decisiones concretas.

Transformá tu producción con Terratio

Book a free consultation to speak with a carbon export and discuss your goals. Let’s build a smarter, greener future for your business.

Close-up of a dark green leaf showing its textured surface and central vein against a muted background.
Close-up of a dark green leaf showing its textured surface and central vein against a muted background.
Smiling young woman with long hair standing against a dark green background, holding a finger to her chin.
A smiling woman with her arms crossed, standing against a dark green background. She has long, dark hair.
Close-up of a dark green leaf showing its textured surface and central vein against a muted background.
Smiling young man with short hair poses against a dark background, wearing a green button-up shirt.
Close-up of a tree stump showing growth rings and a textured brown wood surface.
A smiling young man with crossed arms, wearing a plaid shirt and white t-shirt, poses against a dark background.
Close-up of a tree stump showing growth rings and a textured brown wood surface.

Transformá tu producción con Terratio

Book a free consultation to speak with a carbon export and discuss your goals. Let’s build a smarter, greener future for your business.

Close-up of a dark green leaf showing its textured surface and central vein against a muted background.
Close-up of a dark green leaf showing its textured surface and central vein against a muted background.
Smiling young woman with long hair standing against a dark green background, holding a finger to her chin.
A smiling woman with her arms crossed, standing against a dark green background. She has long, dark hair.
Close-up of a dark green leaf showing its textured surface and central vein against a muted background.
Smiling young man with short hair poses against a dark background, wearing a green button-up shirt.
Close-up of a tree stump showing growth rings and a textured brown wood surface.
A smiling young man with crossed arms, wearing a plaid shirt and white t-shirt, poses against a dark background.
Close-up of a tree stump showing growth rings and a textured brown wood surface.

Transformá tu producción con Terratio

Book a free consultation to speak with a carbon export and discuss your goals. Let’s build a smarter, greener future for your business.

Close-up of a dark green leaf showing its textured surface and central vein against a muted background.
Close-up of a dark green leaf showing its textured surface and central vein against a muted background.
Smiling young woman with long hair standing against a dark green background, holding a finger to her chin.
A smiling woman with her arms crossed, standing against a dark green background. She has long, dark hair.
Close-up of a dark green leaf showing its textured surface and central vein against a muted background.
Smiling young man with short hair poses against a dark background, wearing a green button-up shirt.
Close-up of a tree stump showing growth rings and a textured brown wood surface.
A smiling young man with crossed arms, wearing a plaid shirt and white t-shirt, poses against a dark background.
Close-up of a tree stump showing growth rings and a textured brown wood surface.