A Regional Shift Towards Measurable Sustainability
Seven airports under the Amazonia Airports Concessionaire have taken a meaningful step by joining the Airport Carbon Accreditation programme. This move signals a structured approach to understanding and managing emissions in a region that plays a critical role in global environmental balance.
Tabatinga, Cruzeiro do Sul, and Tefé airports have entered at Level 1. This stage focuses on building a clear emissions baseline, which is often the most overlooked yet essential foundation for any long term sustainability strategy.
From Measurement to Active Reduction
At a more advanced stage, Manaus, Porto Velho, Boa Vista, and Rio Branco airports have reached Level 3. This reflects a shift from internal tracking to collaborative action. Airports at this level engage airlines, ground handlers, and other stakeholders to reduce emissions collectively.
This transition highlights an important insight. True decarbonisation in aviation cannot be achieved in isolation. It requires ecosystem level alignment where every operational partner contributes to measurable outcomes.
Leadership Beyond Compliance
The recognition by ACI LAC underscores a broader transformation within Brazilian aviation. Rather than treating sustainability as a compliance requirement, these airports are positioning themselves as active contributors to global climate goals.
This approach reflects a growing maturity in the sector where environmental management becomes integrated with operational excellence and long term resilience.
What This Means for the Industry
As more airports adopt structured frameworks like carbon accreditation, the industry is moving towards standardised accountability. This creates opportunities for organisations that can support data driven decision making, stakeholder coordination, and scalable sustainability strategies.
Conclusion
The progress of Amazonia Airports is not just a certification milestone. It represents a shift in how aviation infrastructure approaches climate responsibility. For stakeholders across the aviation value chain, this reinforces the need to move beyond intent and towards measurable, collaborative action, an area where focused sustainability expertise continues to play a critical role in shaping future ready aviation systems.

