What was once viewed as a regulatory cost or a concession to the ESG agenda has now emerged as the primary driver of growth, innovation, and capital allocation in the sector. By 2025, the question is no longer whether we should invest in the transition, but where and how fast in order to stay ahead in a rapidly redefining market.
In 2025, the ESG agenda has consolidated itself as the central force that redefines the Brazilian electricity sector, moving from discourse to practice and becoming a decisive criterion for investments, regulation and risk management. The transformation is led by the Environmental pillar, which has evolved from simple decarbonization to an urgent concern with the climate resilience of infrastructure.
The year 2025 emerges as a critical milestone in the fight against climate change. Recent reports from organizations such as the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), the United Nations (UN), and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) converge on a clear message: the window of opportunity to avoid the most catastrophic impacts of global warming is rapidly closing.









