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Brazilian prosecutors try to block $180 Million carbon credit deal

By Manuela Andreoni & Ricardo Brito

SAO PAULO - Brazilian prosecutors have filed a lawsuit to cancel a $180m carbon offset scheme that was signed by the state of Para last year, with the support of a coalition of large corporations and wealthy governments.

The lawsuit is a strong blow for the government of Para which will host the next global summit on climate change, COP30. It also strikes the carbon credit industry in general, who had been struggling to reposition themselves after years of being accused of fraud and abuse.

Para is home to one of the most fragile sections of the Amazon Rainforest, the largest rainforest in the world.

The prosecutors claimed that the state had not informed and consulted the affected communities.

The prosecutors also claimed that Brazilian law does not allow the pre-sale carbon credits. In this case, the carbon in the trees is what the project claims will prevent them from being cut down. The state's carbon credit plan, according to the prosecutors, was approved "before COP 30" which put pressure on Indigenous Peoples and Traditional Communities in Para.

Amazon.com Inc. and at least five companies have agreed to buy the credits via the LEAF Coalition for forest conservation, an initiative that the ecommerce giant, along with other firms and government, helped found in 2021. This group includes the United States, United Kingdom, and other countries.

Requests for comments were not immediately answered by the Para government or Emergent, an organization that coordinates LEAF Coalition.

This project is one of the first jurisdictional carbon credit schemes in the world, as it covers whole countries or states. This new design aimed to ease concerns about private projects by simplifying the accounting of credits.

The company aimed to sell 12 million carbon credits for $15 each, based on the amount of carbon stored in trees it would prevent from being deforested. (Reporting, writing and editing by Manuela Andreoni. Additional reporting by Ricardo Brito. Editing by Leslie Adler.)

(source: Reuters)