Germany supports Brazil’s forest plan at climate talks
MAURICIO SAVARESE and ISABEL DEBRE |
World leaders gathered on the edge of the imperilled Amazon rainforest for a second day of the world’s most important talks on climate change, as Brazil sought more pledges for a fund to preserve tropical forests.
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva met with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, hoping to win his support for an ambitious financial incentive scheme to support the conservation of the world’s endangered forests.
Merz said afterwards that Germany would make a “considerable” pledge, but didn’t specify an amount.
“We are supporting this initiative; Germany is contributing considerably,” Merz said.
“If Germany says ‘considerable,’ it will be considerable.”

The initiative, dubbed the Tropical Forest Forever Facility, drew $US5.5 billion ($A8.5 billion) in pledges on the first day of the UN climate summit, with Norway and France promising to join Brazil and Indonesia in investing.
The fund eventually seeks to leverage investments into $US125 billion ($A193 billion) that can be used to pay 74 developing countries for every hectare of forest they conserve.
Financed by interest-bearing debt instead of donations, the fund would invest its assets to generate returns that would be used to pay back the creditors and reward countries for curbing deforestation.
Rather than relying on goodwill, the scheme aims to make it more lucrative for governments to keep their trees standing than cut them down for industrial farming or mining.
The fund’s rules also call for governments to set aside 20 per cent of the compensation they receive to indigenous people, who for millennia have managed and preserved lands.
“With that, we can overcome government policy fluctuations and secure a structure, an autonomous governance to support tropical forests,” Brazil’s indigenous peoples minister, Sonia Guajajara, told reporters.
Forests, including the Amazon, where Brazil is hosting this year’s conference, play a crucial role in regulating the climate by absorbing huge amounts of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that heats the planet when it’s released into the atmosphere.
The climate talks are expected to have a large presence of tribes, particularly from Brazil and surrounding countries.
But reduced participation in the summit revealed divisions among countries over how to cut greenhouse gas emissions, with US President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement hanging over the talks.
The US, which is responsible for over 10 per cent of the world’s emissions, did not send any senior officials to the summit.
The heads of the other biggest polluters — China, India and Russia — also skipped the preliminary leaders’ gathering ahead of formal climate talks that kick off on Monday.
Expanding global oil demand, rising concerns about energy security and escalating political tensions fuelled by Trump’s disdain for climate change have pulled attention away from net-zero commitments and slowed the green transition.
In many ways, Lula epitomises those tensions.
Even as he champions deforestation efforts — and promised on Friday that Brazil was “not afraid to discuss the energy transition” — he has overseen an expansion in Brazil’s oil and gas production.
Just weeks before hosting the UN climate summit in Belem, his government granted permission to state-controlled oil company Petrobras to move a drillship to the mouth of the Amazon River, just 160 kilometres from the rainforest to search for more crude oil.
In a sign of the other issues competing for his attention, Lula’s government said he would take a brief break from the climate summit over the weekend to attend a meeting in Colombia over Trump’s attacks on alleged drug-smuggling vessels off of Venezuela.
That comes as officials warn that time is running out to keep global warming below the key Paris Agreement benchmark of 1.5 degrees Celsius.
Last year was the hottest year on record, with the average temperatures exceeding that limit for the first time.
Scientists say that every fraction of a degree of atmospheric heating unleashes more intense storms, longer droughts and deadlier heatwaves.
AP


