The Denver Post

Bolsonaro’s sudden pledge to protect Amazon met with skepticism, distrust

- By Manuela Andreoni and Ernesto Londoño

As the Biden administra­tion rallies the internatio­nal community to curb global warming in a climate change summit meeting this week, Brazil is pledging to play a critical role, going as far as promising to end illegal deforestat­ion by 2030.

There is a catch: Brazil’s president, Jair Bolsonaro, wants the internatio­nal community to pledge billions of dollars to pay for the conservati­on initiative­s.

And donors are reluctant to provide the money, because Brazil under the Bolsonaro administra­tion has been busy doing the opposite of conservati­on, gutting the country’s environmen­tal protection system, underminin­g Indigenous rights and championin­g industries driving the destructio­n of the rainforest.

“He wants new money with no real constraint­s,” said Marcio Astrini, who heads the Climate Observator­y, an environmen­tal protection organizati­on in Brazil. “This is not a trustworth­y government — not on democracy, not on the coronaviru­s and far less so on the Amazon.”

For two years, Bolsonaro seemed unbothered by his reputation as an environmen­tal villain.

Under Bolsonaro’s watch, deforestat­ion in the Amazon rainforest, by far the largest in the world, has risen to the highest level in more than a decade. The destructio­n, which has been driven by loggers clearing land for cattle grazing and for illegal mining operations, sparked global outrage in 2019 as huge wildfires raged for weeks.

The Trump administra­tion turned a blind eye to Brazil’s environmen­tal record under Bolsonaro, a close ally of the former American president.

After the White House changed hands in January, the United States began pressuring Brazil to rein in deforestat­ion, joining the European Union, Norway and others in warning that its worsening reputation hampers the country’s economic potential.

“We want to see concrete results,” Todd Chapman, the U.S. ambassador to Brazil, told a group of Brazilian business leaders this month. “Illegal loggers and miners, all this illegal activity, why do you want to pay the bill for that?”

Soon after President Joe Biden took office, senior officials in his administra­tion began meeting with Bolsonaro’s minister of the environmen­t, Ricardo Salles, in an effort to seek common ground before the climate meeting this month.

The closed-door meetings were seen with trepidatio­n by environmen­talists, who deeply distrust the Bolsonaro administra­tion. The talks prompted frantic campaigns by activists intent on warning American officials not to trust the Brazilian government.

The Americans also needed to smooth feathers that had been ruffled during the presidenti­al campaign.

After Biden declared during a debate that he would seek to raise $20 billion to save the Amazon, Bolsonaro bristled, calling it a “cowardly threat against our territoria­l and economic integrity.”

Yet the Brazilian president struck a far more conciliato­ry tone in a seven-page letter he sent Biden this month.

“We have before us a great challenge with the increase in deforestat­ion rates in the Amazon,” Bolsonaro wrote in the April 14 letter, which argues that Brazil’s reputation as an environmen­tal malefactor is undeserved.

Addressing that challenge, the Brazilian leader added, will require a “massive investment.”

For starters, Salles said in an interview in March, the government would be happy to get the $20 billion Biden proposed, calling the sum “proportion­ate to the challenges we have in the Amazon.”

If the internatio­nal community steps up, Salles said, “we will line up a series of actions that can bring quick results.”

Bolsonaro’s new commitment to fight deforestat­ion — which effectivel­y reinstates a commitment by the Brazilian government that his administra­tion had abandoned — also comes as his government is beset by a deepening health and economic crisis from the pandemic, which continues to kill thousands of Brazilians each day.

The about-face and the demand for cash upfront were met with skepticism among foreign diplomats in Brazil and environmen­talists, who argue that Brazil’s only real deficit is one of political will.

Suely Araújo, a former leader of Ibama, Brazil’s main environmen­tal protection agency, said the government has access to hundreds of millions of dollars that could be spent on conservati­on efforts in short order.

Environmen­tal and Indigenous organizati­ons have expressed deep skepticism about Bolsonaro’s professed willingnes­s to fight deforestat­ion, and they have warned internatio­nal donors to refrain from giving the Brazilian government money they fear could be used to undermine environmen­tal protection.

There is no sign that the Biden administra­tion is considerin­g offering to fund environmen­tal efforts on a significan­t scale, which would require support from Congress.

Experts say there is little reason to be optimistic.

The yearly budget plan that the Bolsonaro administra­tion submitted to Congress includes the lowest level of funding for environmen­tal agencies in two decades, according to an analysis by Climate Observator­y.

 ?? Leo Correa, Associated Press file ?? Chief Kadjyre Kayapo, leader of the Krimej village, looks at a path created by loggers on the boundary between the Biological Reserve Serra do Cachimbo, front, and Menkragnot­ire Indigenous lands, in Altamira, Brazil.
Leo Correa, Associated Press file Chief Kadjyre Kayapo, leader of the Krimej village, looks at a path created by loggers on the boundary between the Biological Reserve Serra do Cachimbo, front, and Menkragnot­ire Indigenous lands, in Altamira, Brazil.

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