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Brazil awards first Amazon Reforestation Concession to Startup Re.green

The Brazilian government has auctioned off its first public land concession to startup Re.green for reforestation. This is the first attempt to use carbon credits to fund the recovery of millions acres of degraded protected areas.

Re.green is the only bidder who offered to restore and protect for 40 years a 145,000-acre parcel in the Bom Futuro Reserve in the Amazon rainforest. According to the auction notice, the fee was 0.7% of the revenue generated by the project. This is expected to be around $2 million per year. The company is part of a group that buys degraded land from farmers and ranchers in order to replant native Brazilian tree species. Bom Futuro is its first project on a government-owned land.

The project will also include a community of indigenous Karitianas who live in that area.

The Environment Minister, Marina Silva, said during Wednesday's auction at the Sao Paulo Stock Exchange: "We have managed to turn something that was extremely negative for climate change, biodiversity and the local population into something positive."

Scientists warn that the Amazon rainforest is nearing a tipping-point, after which it will irreversibly transform into a degraded ecome. Researchers claim that stopping deforestation will not be enough to save the Amazon rainforest. Instead, governments need to reforest vast sections of forest. Brazil's new carbon market has attracted private investors and banks who are interested in restoring native forests and selling?credits' for the carbon removed from the atmosphere.

The auction was a test to see if such projects could be implemented at a large enough scale to help the government reach its goal of reforesting 30 million acres by 2030.

The auction did not receive any bids for a second, slightly smaller plot of the Bom Futuro Reserve.

Officials stated that they were satisfied with the results because "the model was new and untested."

Garo Batmanian said that the Brazilian forestry service plans to offer 750,000 acres under this model in 2027. He added that officials have identified 3.2 million acres in need of restoration. (Reporting and editing by Brad Haynes, Ni Williams, and Manuela Andreoni)

(source: Reuters)