Обычный вид

Появились новые статьи. Нажмите, чтобы обновить страницу.
До вчерашнего дняОсновной поток

Amazon Fund: Forest production chains to receive BRL 96.6M

10 декабря 2025 в 15:15

Logo Agência Brasil

Natural resource production chains in the Amazon - such as cupuaçu and açaí fruits and pirarucu fish - will receive investments of BRL 96.6 million through the Forests and Communities: Living Amazon program, announced on Tuesday (Dec. 9) in Brasília.

The initiative by the National Supply Company (Conab) will be carried out with resources from the Amazon Fund and with support from the Ministries of the Environment and Climate Change and Agrarian Development and Family Farming.

Notícias relacionadas:

The program will be implemented over two years with the aim of expanding the supply of forest products to the consumer market, diversifying the regional menu through the National School Feeding Program (PNAE), and increasing the supply of foods originating from socio-biodiversity and family farming to the Food Acquisition Program (PAA).
09/12/2025 - Brasília - Conab e BNDES lançam ‘Amazônia Viva’ para viabilizar o escoamento de produtos da floresta a mercados consumidores. Foto: CONAB09/12/2025 - Brasília - Conab e BNDES lançam ‘Amazônia Viva’ para viabilizar o escoamento de produtos da floresta a mercados consumidores. Foto: CONAB
The Forests and Communities: Living Amazon program, announced on Tuesday (Dec. 9) in Brasília - Conab

“It is a legacy that we in the Brazilian government need to leave to the forest peoples. Socio-biodiversity products need to be promoted and deserve the visibility that other products important to Brazil’s economy have,” said Conab President João Edegar Pretto.

The initiative will cover 32 projects from cooperatives and associations in the Legal Amazon region, bringing together foresters, aquaculturists, extractivists, artisanal fishers, indigenous peoples, and quilombola communities.

Each proposal may receive investments of up to BRL 2.5 million for the acquisition of equipment and infrastructure aimed at boosting the commercialization of forest products in consumer markets.

The funds will be transferred to the program by the National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES), which manages the Amazon Fund. According to BNDES’ socio-environmental director, Tereza Campello, the investment was made possible by a major effort to reduce deforestation and restructure the fund’s resources, allowing for investments that will total BRL 2.2 billion in 2025.

“This Conab initiative represents almost BRL 100 million for a strategic agenda that will reach our communities and also enable a platform where we will have all the socio-biodiversity data available in the Amazon in a professional and organized manner,” concluded Tereza Campello.

COP30 mobilizes 190 countries across 120 climate action plans

1 декабря 2025 в 18:19

Logo Agência Brasil

In the assessment of the 30th United Nations Conference on Climate Change (COP30), held in Belém, northern Brazil, the consensus on 29 items of the climate agenda was celebrated among the 195 parties that participated in the negotiations. The final document, expected at the end of each COP, does not include other agreements that fall outside official decisions but are nonetheless reached in the multilateral setting, such as the Action Agenda.

According to Bruna Cerqueira, general coordinator of the COP30 Presidency’s Action Agenda, producing a document at the end of COP30 with 120 plans to accelerate climate initiatives - and with 190 countries acting on at least one of them - was an unprecedented global achievement.

Notícias relacionadas:

For the first time, initiatives that support the implementation of COP decisions - developed by actors such as the private sector and subnational governments - were organized into a kind of global repository of good ideas. According to Bruna Cerqueira, the intention was to bring together voluntary actions to speed up the implementation of what has already been agreed.

“We created six axes for the Action Agenda, focused on energy, industry, and transport; on forests, biodiversity, and oceans; on food systems and agriculture; on cities, infrastructure, and water; on human and social development; and a final cross-cutting one on financing, technology, and capacity building,” Cerqueira explained.

Results

In practice, the results could already be seen throughout the activities held in Belém. One example was the global initiative for land protection, a plan to accelerate the Forests and Land Tenure (Pledge) commitment, which had already existed beforehand.

According to the member of the COP30 Presidency, a more results-oriented approach and the effort to connect negotiations to people’s lives led to greater country participation in the plan and renewed funding for the initiative.

“USD 1.7 billion was advanced, and now they have set a further target of USD 1.5 to USD 2 billion in new resources. This new phase was also accompanied by a commitment from some countries to improve their land management. Brazil, in fact, announced the demarcation of some lands during the COP as part of this commitment as well,” Cerqueira stated.

Levers

After being classified under the six axes, the initiatives received assessments based on twelve implementation levers, considering perspectives that range from the regulation of initiatives in the territories to demand, supply, and public acceptance.

“We made a diagnosis of what is going well and what needs to be prioritized, and the plans are actions to address these levers, so that we can remove the obstacles and move forward more quickly,” the general coordinator added.

As a guide for this work, the COP30 presidency used the Global Stocktake (GST), a transparency mechanism of the Paris Agreement that assesses progress on long-term greenhouse gas emission targets. Conducted every five years, the first GST was delivered during COP28, held in 2023 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Connection

Based on the classification and diagnosis aligned with the GST results, the Action Agenda achieved an outcome that links formal negotiations to people’s daily lives, the coordinator assesses. “If we want to transform economies and bring everyone into the structure of these six axes, every economic actor and every member of society has to understand. Hardly anyone will know paragraph X of the GST, but if you talk about energy, industry, and transport, everyone understands,” she emphasized.

With 120 plans already developed, many of them underway, Bruna Cerqueira believes that the next steps will be to ensure that the Action Agenda is strengthened at future COPs. “The next presidency has already indicated, in the agreement between Turkey and Australia, that they appreciated the structure and intend to build on it. The challenge now is to consolidate this legacy and work with them to keep everyone at the table and accelerate implementation,” Cerqueira noted.

COP30: Activities return to normal on Friday following fire

Logo Agência Brasil

The Blue Zone, the main negotiation area of the 30th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30), opened early on Friday morning (Nov. 21) so that work could return to normal at the start of the day. By 9 a.m., sessions had already resumed in some of the negotiation rooms.

The country pavilions, an area affected by the fire in the early afternoon of Thursday (20), were isolated and will not host any activities until the conclusion of the conference.

Notícias relacionadas:

According to COP30 President Ambassador André Corrêa do Lago on Thursday night, the interruption of work caused by the fire is likely to affect the progress of negotiations, requiring the schedule to be extended.

COP30 was scheduled to end on Friday, but as Corrêa do Lago stated in an exclusive interview with TV Brasil, one of the outlets of Empresa Brasil de Comunicação (EBC), it is common for activities to be extended due to the complexity of the negotiations and the need to reach consensus on decisions aimed at accelerating global climate action and limiting global warming to 1.5 °C.

There is no specific date for the end of the work. “We’ll see how long it lasts. You know that COPs generally last longer than expected. We wanted to move forward, but we’ll see how to do it,” said Corrêa do Lago.

According to the president of COP30, what matters is that the work achieves a strong outcome and has a positive impact on people’s lives.

❌
❌