Environment
Nutribras Alimentos achieves full water reuse and becomes a national benchmark in water management

Company invests in technology to treat and reuse 100% of the water consumed in its operations
Nutribras Alimentos, headquartered in Sorriso, Mato Grosso, is proving that large-scale production can go hand in hand with environmental preservation. The company has reached a milestone by reusing 100% of the water consumed in its industrial and agricultural operations, positioning itself as a model in sustainable water management within Brazil’s agribusiness sector.
The initiative was presented during the 2nd Regional Water Resources Seminar of the Watershed Committee for the Right Bank Tributaries of the Upper Teles Pires River, held on June 25 at the City Council of Sinop (MT). Themed “Clean Water, Sustainable Future”, the event brought together representatives from the productive sector, government, and civil society to discuss water crisis solutions.
According to the company’s environmental and occupational safety engineer, Júnior Martins, Nutribras’ processing plant treats and reuses all the water it consumes through a system of seven treatment lagoons, each responsible for a different stage of filtration. The treated water is then discharged into the Tenente Lira River, fully compliant with environmental standards. In the company’s rural operations, the system is even more advanced: no water is discharged into natural water bodies. All wastewater from pig farming is treated on-site and reused for fertigation, combining 20% biofertilizer with 80% clean water from the river to irrigate crops.
“We’ve created a virtuous cycle that merges agricultural production with environmental preservation,” said Martins.
As an active member of the local watershed committee, Nutribras holds a seat in the forum alongside civil society, government, and the private sector. The company’s leadership was praised by Jorge Muller, president of the committee and Sinop’s Secretary for the Environment. “Nutribras is a company with national and international reach that consumes large volumes of water, yet it shows a rare environmental awareness. If all industries followed this model, Brazil’s water outlook would be far more promising,” he stated.
The company also received praise from Paulo Bellicanta, president of Sindifrigo-MT (Mato Grosso Meat Industry Union), who highlighted that Nutribras has broken long-standing paradigms in the meatpacking sector. “For years, it was believed that a high-consumption industry couldn’t adopt such practices. Nutribras has proven otherwise — it’s a model for the entire sector and society,” he said.
Commitment to the SDGs and regional impact
In 2023, Nutribras invested R$773,000 (approximately USD 150,000) in upgrading its water treatment and monitoring systems, reinforcing its alignment with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) — particularly SDG 6.3 (improving water quality and reducing pollution) and SDG 6.4 (increasing water-use efficiency across all sectors).
Arthur Paro, Planning Manager at Águas de Sorriso, emphasized the positive regional impact of such initiatives, especially during droughts. “When a company like Nutribras commits to water reuse, it significantly reduces pressure on our surface and groundwater sources — key to human supply. It proves that being economically competitive and environmentally responsible is not only possible but necessary.”
Nutribras currently sources water from both underground and surface supplies for human consumption, industrial processes, irrigation, and animal hydration. Looking ahead to 2025, the company aims to further strengthen water use monitoring in its pig farming operations, deepening its commitment to sustainable development.
The seminar also featured presentations from Águas de Sinop, the Mato Grosso Institute for Irrigated Agriculture (Imafir), Fiemt (State Federation of Industries), and Professor Adilson Pacheco of the Federal University of Mato Grosso (UFMT), addressing issues such as wastewater treatment, river monitoring, and the role of territorial intelligence in water resource planning. The watershed in question covers 7,050 km² and includes the municipalities of Sinop, Sorriso, Vera, and Nova Ubiratã.
READ TOO

Animal welfare
16/04/2025
Aurora Coop renews international certifications and reinforces commitment to animal welfare
Independent audits confirm excellence in swine and poultry operations, impacting over 350 million animals annually Aurora Coop, one of Brazil’s largest agro-industrial […]
Read more
Environment
24/09/2024
C.Vale is the first cooperative in Brazil to obtain ASC certification for tilapia production in excavated tanks
The fish slaughterhouse and fish farming company have received an unprecedented certification. C.Vale is the first cooperative in Brazil to obtain certification […]
Read more
Animal welfare
27/05/2024
Poultry unit achieves excellence in animal welfare
Aurora Coop – one of the largest agro-industrial conglomerates in the country – was one of the first Brazilian companies to join […]
Read more