NewsAmazon nations pledge support for Brazil’s COP30 rainforest fund

Amazon nations pledge support for Brazil’s COP30 rainforest fund

The eight Latin American nations that are home to the Amazon Basin have pledged support for a new global fund that will seek to channel finance for rainforest conservation, in a major vote of confidence for one of Brazil’s flagship initiatives as host of the COP30 UN climate talks in November.

In a joint declaration issued at the Amazon Summit held in Bogotá this week, the eight countries that make up the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO) pledged to support the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) as an “innovative mechanism” to mobilise finance for climate and nature protection.

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The TFFF was proposed by Brazil in 2023 as a global investment fund that would allocate a share of its returns to rainforest conservation initiatives around the world. The fund will be backed by an initial, one-time $25-billion contribution from donor nations, along with $100 billion in private funds.

The declaration from Amazon nations also invites “potential investor countries” to “announce substantial contributions” intended to guarantee the fund’s quick activation. Those that have expressed interest so far include Britain, Norway and the UAE.

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva told the summit in Colombia: “We need this to be the most serious COP of all, one that doesn’t end in empty speeches and promises”. “We’re fed up with promises,” he added. “I want to see who’s going to put up the money to keep the forest standing.”

“The proposal that we arrive united at COP30 in Belem is fundamental,” said Colombian President Gustavo Petro in a speech alongside other South American leaders, including Bolivian president Luis Arce, Ecuador’s vice-president María José Pinto and Venezuelan vice-president Gabriela Jiménez.

The Amazon summit in Bogotá follows a meeting two years ago in the COP30 host city of Belém where ACTO leaders issued a declaration in support of Brazil’s COP30 presidency and laid the groundwork for co-operation around the world’s largest rainforest.

Amazon declaration omits fossil fuels

Despite calls from Indigenous groups and civil society for ACTO leaders to halt oil and gas developments in the Amazon Basin, fossil fuels were not explicitly mentioned in the Bogotá declaration. Leaders did, however, pledge to “advance toward a just, equitable and orderly energy transition”.

Alex Rafalowicz, executive director of the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative, said “the Amazonian presidents missed the opportunity to recognise that oil and gas extraction is one of the greatest threats to the Amazon.”

COP30 host Brazil is one of the countries that has major plans to explore for oil and gas in the Amazon region, despite significant opposition from environmental and Indigenous groups. Its neighbour Guyana has rapidly ascended to become a major oil producer in a partnership with fossil fuel giant ExxonMobil.

Campaigners at the Amazon summit in Bogotá said Venezuela, Ecuador and Perú explicitly opposed any mentions of fossil fuels in the final ACTO text.

“Amazonian presidents are not listening to the voices of the Indigenous peoples who have protected the forest since ancient times.

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