Brazil’s Lula returns with Amazon dream team
aiming to save the rainforest
Deforestation in Brazil surged 60 percent under Lula’s
predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro.
BY KARL
MATHIESEN
JANUARY 1,
2023 4:55 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/luiz-inacio-lula-da-silva-amazon-team-save-rainforest/
Luiz Inácio
Lula da Silva was to be sworn in as president of Brazil on Sunday, a moment he
has claimed would help turn back a tide of destruction engulfing the Amazon
rainforest.
The
incoming leader, widely known as Lula, has promised to reverse and eventually
end the deforestation of the world’s most important rainforest, which
accelerated under his predecessor Jair Bolsonaro. Lula’s second stint in the
presidency begins 20 years after his first inauguration.
In his
inauguration speech, Lula vowed to undo the harm caused by the previous
government, which he said was “inspired by fascism.” Bolsonaro had left
“terrible ruins” among Brazil’s institutions, he said. “They destroyed the
protection of the environment.”
“The world
expects Brazil to once again become a leader in tackling the climate crisis and
an example of a socially and environmentally responsible country,” he said,
adding that these goals did not need to come at the cost of Brazil’s
agricultural industry.
Almost
two-thirds of the rainforest, which helps to regulate the global climate, lies
within Brazil’s borders. Bolsonaro stripped back enforcement, attacked
indigenous landowners and encouraged industry, leading to a devastating 60
percent surge in deforestation during his term compared to the previous four
years. Parts of the forest became sources of carbon emissions rather than CO2
sponges.
In
response, the EU held up the conclusion of a provisional 2019 trade deal with
the Mercosur bloc of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Lula’s election
has put that deal back on the EU’s agenda, with the incoming Swedish presidency
of the Council of the EU indicating that it wants the accord done in the next
six months.
Lula has
named Amazon activist Marina Silva as environment and climate change minister
and has tapped Sonia Guajajara, an indigenous woman, to be Brazil’s first
minister of indigenous peoples.
Silva was
Lula’s environment minister during his first term, from 2003-2010, and was
widely credited with a huge drop in deforestation, which was at a higher rate
when he entered office in 2003 than it is today. She resigned after falling out
with Lula, who she viewed as becoming too close to agribusiness. But more than
a decade later, she backed Lula’s campaign for president.
“Together
with our mobilized society, we face the great challenge of rescuing and
updating the lost socio-environmental agenda,” she said last week.
If they are
to succeed, the Brazilian officials will have to rein in rampant criminality
and lawlessness across a vast landscape.
Rebuilding
hollowed-out police forces will be expensive and take time, said Marcio
Astrini, executive secretary of the NGO Observatório do clima. "In some
regions, the crime became one of the main sources of the local economy.”
Astrini
said Lula also will have to face down a legislature still largely supportive of
agribusiness and with a large pro-Bolsonaro faction.
“The
challenges are huge, but at the same time this government can count on enormous
international and local support,” he said.
Amazon Fund
The new
administration is already courting outside help. Just two weeks after his
October election win — and despite not yet being in office — Lula appeared at
the COP27 climate talks in Egypt to reassure the world that Brazil would be a
responsible environmental steward. His team also opened informal talks with
Germany for a new financing package to aid the South American country’s
transition to a cleaner economy.
Both Norway
and Germany have indicated they are willing to unfreeze their contributions to
Brazil through the Amazon Fund — a program Silva helped design that rewards
efforts to cut deforestation. Bolsonaro suspended the fund. Norway’s embassy in
Brasilia told the Associated Press the fund “can be opened quickly to support
the government’s action plan once the Brazilian government reinstates the
governing structure of the fund.”
At COP27,
Silva lobbied Britain, France, the U.S. and others to contribute to the fund,
which already contains more than half a billion dollars in unspent financing.
During Jair Bolsonaro's term, there was a 60 percent
surge in deforestation compared to the previous four years |
The
appointment of Guajajara gives Brazil’s tribal groups a ministry in government
for the first time. That’s also seen as a key factor in the protection of the
Amazon as much of the forest lies within areas designated as indigenous lands
but which are often preyed upon by criminal gangs who run mining and logging
operations or open the forest up to grazing.
Granting
more power to indigenous peoples would ensure forests are protected, Lula said:
“No one knows our forests better or is more effective in defending them than
those who have been here since time immemorial.”
U.S.
President Joe Biden sent a delegation to the inauguration headed by Interior
Secretary Deb Haaland — herself an indigenous woman.
Lula has
also tapped Jean Paul Prates to run the state energy company Petrobras, a move
that Reuters reported was seen as an indication that the company would slowly
shift its emphasis away from deep water oil and gas exploration to renewable
sources of energy.
Lula will
attempt to preserve the Amazon amid intense political division in Brazil. He
defeated Bolsonaro in a tight runoff and his inauguration came amid heightened
security, after a foiled bomb threat from a man who reportedly called himself a
Bolsonaro supporter.
Bolsonaro
left the country and landed in the U.S. state of Florida on Friday.
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