Brazil’s Climate Fund has greenlit the allocation of $2 billion towards financing initiatives aimed at tackling climate change and fostering sustainable development. The decision underscores Brazil’s commitment to environmental preservation and combating the adverse effects of global warming.
The country’s Climate Fund offers financing for various sectors, including renewable energy, energy efficiency, transportation, waste management and sustainable agriculture. With a strong emphasis on mitigating climate change impacts.
In mid-March, at their first meeting in 2024, the Fund’s Management Committee approved an annual plan to apply resources for the reimbursable use of R$10.4 billion (approximately $2 billion). Part of the funds were raised in September last year by issuing the first sustainable sovereign bonds, or external debt bonds, with sustainable criteria. The bonds were launched at the New York Stock Exchange by Brazil’s Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, Marina Silva, and Finance Minister Fernando Haddad.
In the official government press release of the investment, a paragraph reads “Created by Law No. 12,114 of December 2009, the Climate Fund was resumed and reformulated in 2023 after four years of virtual paralysis.” The current administration often accuses the former President Jair Bolsonaro’s administration of enabling deforestation and an anti-environmental approach. During the Bolsonaro years, there was no new investment into the Climate Fund.
According to the official data from ‘Map Biomas’ (Brazil’s annual maps of land cover and land), between 2022 and 2023, Brazil saw a drop of about 10% in deforestation. Current president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, took office in January 2023.
Talking to BGTN, JP Amaral, Manager of Nature from Alana, an institution that runs social-environmental programs focused on children, said the investment was excellent news. “The release of the investment in the Climate Fund is of the utmost importance, after conflicts and instability in its management. The amount released for actions to tackle the climate crisis could enable Brazil to take new paths in the fight against climate change and its consequences, enforcing Article 225 of the Federal Constitution, which guarantees an ecologically balanced environment for present and future generations.”
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He also shared that, “children and adolescents make up around a third of the Brazilian population and they are also the group suffering most from the consequences of the climate crisis in Brazil and worldwide”.
For Amaral, special attention should be given to this age group through climate adaptation measures as they are directly and disproportionately more impacted in times of extreme events. As an example, Amaral proposes climate adaptation lessons in schools.
The funds will finance projects from the public sector, private companies and the third sector in six priority areas: Resilient and Sustainable Urban Development; Green Industry; Transport Logistics, Public Transport and Green Mobility; Energy Transition (solar and wind generation, and biomass, energy efficiency, amongst others); Native Forests and Water Resources; and Green Services and Innovation.
“This is the largest volume of resources ever invested by the Climate Fund. We are increasing by more than two dozen times the amount that the federal government has applied annually to date in the area of tackling the climate emergency,” said João Paulo Capobianco, the Ministry of Environment Executive Secretary.
The contribution strengthens the fund, making it one of the main instruments for financing Brazil’s ecological transformation. The rates for financing initiatives vary from 1% per year (native forests and water resources) to 8% (solar and wind power generation), as defined by the National Monetary Council, plus the financial agent’s rate and the project’s risk spread.
Still, despite being elected with an agenda that prioritises sustainability and environmental policies, as well as protection for native peoples at areas of vulnerability, the current government faces criticism for its Climate management.
In 2023, due to political negotiations with the centre-right political spectrum, the Lula administration re-allocated resources from the environmental ministry to others.
“It is necessary to invest in projects that not only consider the green transition, but also prioritise climate justice agendas. Investments in climate adaptation not only help protect vulnerable communities, including children and adolescents, from the impacts of climate change but can also actively promote the guarantee of their basic rights and their general well-being, thus ensuring the sustainability and resilience that an ecological transformation needs to consider,” said Amaral.