Latest News

Brazil and France launch a $1.1 billion program to protect Amazon rainforest

Brazil and France launched a program on Tuesday to protect the Brazilian rainforest and the Guyanese Amazon rainforest, involving private and public funds of 1 billion euros ($1.1billion) over the next four-years.

The announcement came during French President Emmanuel Macron’s three-day trip to South America, where he landed in Belem on Tuesday, near the mouth the Amazon River, and met Brazil’s President LuizInacio Lula Da Silva.

In a joint press release, they stated that "We, Brazil and France as Amazonian countries gathered in Belem in the heartland of the Amazon have decided to unite forces to promote a roadmap international for the protection of tropical forest."

Two years before Brazil hosts COP30 climate talks in Belen, 2025, they pledged to work together to end deforestation of the Amazon by 2030 in order to slow down global warming.

The statement stated that "the presidents expressed commitment to conservation, restoration, and sustainable management of tropical forests around the world and agreed to work towards an ambitious agenda including... developing innovative financial tools, market mechanisms, and payments for environment services."

Macron and Lula visited a sustainable chocolate production project on an island near Belem by river boat, where they met with Indigenous leaders.

Raoni Metuktire of the Kayapo tribe, an Indigenous leader and environmental activist, was awarded the National Order of the Legion of Honor at the event. This is France's highest honor for merit.

Chief Raoni - who was a global icon for his 1980s campaigning with Sting by his side - handed documents to Macron denouncing the negative environmental impact a proposed railway supported by soy farmers would have on Indigenous people. He said they had not been consulted freely.

Raoni asked Lula to not approve the construction of the 1,000 km (620 miles) railroad, known as Ferrograo. This would reduce agribusiness shipping costs from Mato Grosso to Amazon river port and to international markets.

The relationship between France and Brazil has recovered from its low point of 2019 when Macron led an international wave of pressure against then-President Jairbolsonaro due to the Amazon fires. Bolsonaro said that Macron and the other G7 nations treated Brazil as "a colony".

After a four-year eclipse, and a virtual freezing of political relations between our countries during Bolsonaro’s presidency, a French presidential advisor said on Friday that they were in the process to relaunch the bilateral relationship and strategic partnership with Brazil. Reporting by Ueslei Marcino in Belem; Andre Romani, Steven Grattan and Anthony Boadle in Sao Paulo. Writing by Anthony Boadle. Editing by Stephen Coates, Sandra Maler and Sandra Coates.

(source: Reuters)