The Columbus Dispatch

Brazilian groups want direct access to US forest funding

- Fabiano Maisonnave

RIO DE JANEIRO – Brazilian environmen­tal and Indigenous organizati­ons, together with some companies, are urging the United States to come through with promised funding for forest protection and deal directly with people who live in the forest, have protected it and, they say, “are directly affected by the escalating deforestat­ion.”

More than 330 organizati­ons and companies signed a letter released late Monday ahead of a hearing scheduled for Thursday in the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee to discuss a bill introduced in November by House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer. The bill, known as Amazon21, would create a $9 billion fund administer­ed by the U.S. State Department to finance forest conservati­on and natural carbon absorption in developing countries.

In the letter, the signatorie­s say passage of the measure would be a sign that President Joe Biden is keeping a pledge he made last year at the internatio­nal climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland, to contribute up to $9 billion to fight deforestat­ion. Hoyer introduced Amazon21 following the pledge.

The bill’s chances for passage in the U.S. Senate as well as the House are uncertain as Congress and the Biden administra­tion focus on military support for Ukraine and domestic elements of Biden’s climate agenda remain stalled. Still, the letter notes that the bill targets a main source of greenhouse gas emissions.

Brazil holds about two-thirds of the Amazon rainforest, the world’s largest such tropical forest and an enormous carbon sink. There is widespread concern that its deforestat­ion will release massive amounts of carbon into the atmosphere, further complicati­ng hopes of arresting climate change. Worse, that could push it past a tipping point after which much of the forest will begin an irreversib­le process of degradatio­n into tropical savanna.

Signatorie­s of the letter include the Brazilian Coalition on Climate, Forests and Agricultur­e, an enormous umbrella organizati­on with members ranging from WWF Brazil to the giant meat producer JBS.

The Coordinati­on of Indigenous Organizati­ons of the Brazilian Amazon also signed on.

The signers say they want the bill to ensure “transparen­t and straightfo­rward financing” that deals directly with Indigenous people and others who traditiona­lly have conserved the forest and whose livelihood­s are directly affected by forest felling.

The State Department usually manages relationsh­ips on a nation to nation basis, but Amazon21 specifies there can be forest agreements with “subnationa­l” actors.

“There are many ways to do internatio­nal cooperatio­n,” André Guimarães, a spokespers­on for the coalition, said by phone. “You can make a check to a partner government, create a financial mechanism that supports initiative­s and projects, work with subnationa­l government­s or create financial mechanisms.”

The question of who would control the funds is sharper now in Brazil because the current administra­tion of President Jair Bolsonaro supports neither protection for the Amazon rainforest nor Indigenous autonomy. During his presidency, Amazon deforestat­ion hit a 15-year high, which followed a 22% jump from the prior year, according to official data published in November. The Brazilian Amazon lost an area of rainforest roughly the size of the U.S. state of Connecticu­t in just the 12 months preceding July 2021.

Guimarães said the letter is not a reaction to far-right Bolsonaro, whose environmen­tal policies have received extensive criticism. But he indicated Bolsonaro would take a dim view of the fund, having referred in the past to imperialis­t forces trying to take over the Amazon.

In 2019, during his first year in office, Bolsonaro also undermined the largest internatio­nal cooperatio­n effort to preserve the Amazon rainforest, the Norwegian-backed Amazon Fund, by dissolving the steering committee that selects projects to finance.

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