The Brazilian initiative, known as the
Tropical Forests Forever Facility, would reward tropical forest countries for
protecting critical biomes.
Unlike the Amazon
Fund, which rewards Brazil if it succeeds in reducing deforestation, the
initiative would benefit all tropical forest nations based on the area
preserved, paying local and Indigenous communities involved for maintaining
ecosystems that “benefit everyone,” João Paulo Capobianco, executive secretary
of Brazil’s Minister of the Environment, told journalists after the ministers'
meeting.
The environment ministers of leading
rich and developing countries assembled this week in Rio de Janeiro for
four-day meetings to discuss climate change and sustainability. The topic
is one of Brazil's priorities as it hosts the G20 presidency until the end of
the year, with heads of state convening in Rio next month.
Over the past few days, environment ministers discussed efforts to address
climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental degradation. They also assessed public and private
financing strategies to support climate change adaptation, transition policies
and the disproportionate impacts on vulnerable populations, Brazil's
Environment Minister Marina Silva said in opening remarks at Thursday's
meeting.
“We have no
time to lose, and we cannot leave anyone behind," Silva said. She
addressed extreme events that have afflicted her own country this year,
including a deadly flood in southern Rio Grande do Sul state and an historic
drought that helped spread massive wildfires across the country.
“In the Amazon, Cerrado and Pantanal biomes, record drought isolates
communities and cities and triggers wildfires of enormous proportions,"
Silva said. “The situation is no different globally, showing in three
dimensions the damage and suffering that average temperatures of 1.5°C (2.7°F)
above pre-industrial levels are already causing to much of humanity.”
The declaration emphasized scaling up
mitigation and adaptation efforts. It also reiterated the signing ministers'
support for the Paris Agreement, which aims to limit global warming to well
below 2°C above pre-industrial levels. Other focus areas included oceans,
waste reduction, circular economy and plastic pollution.
Heads of state on Nov. 18-19 will assess the proposals their proxies have
developed in the run-up to their meeting.
Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da
Silva has put issues that concern the developing world — such as the reduction
of inequalities and the reform of multilateral institutions — at the heart of
the country's G20 presidency.