Brazil Unveils Ambitious Plan to Fight Climate Change

Brazilian sugarcane A plan to tackle climate change and minimize its impacts in Brazil has been drawn up and is now open for public consultation. The plan, formulated by several Brazilian government ministries and the Brazilian Forum of Climate Change  will be available for public consultation until the end of October.

After relevant suggestions have been incorporated, the plan will be sent to Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in November for approval. The Forum of Climate Change is an umbrella organization aiming to stimulate public awareness and dialogue, and incorporate climate change issues into public policies

"Brazil has done its part in the mitigation of climate change and is determined and committed to doing more, using its full national capacity as part of an overall effort to combat climate change," says the plan, released on September 29.

The recommendations are organized into four lines of action: mitigation; vulnerability, impact and adaptation; research and development; and empowerment and divulgation.

Goals include getting 7,000 megawatts of power from renewable energy between 2008 and 2010, increasing production of ethanol from 25.6 billion liters in 2008 to 53.2 billion liters by 2017, and preventing the release of 570 million tons of carbon dioxide between 2008 and 2017 by using biofuels.

Targets will be met by promoting sustainable development in the industrial and agricultural sectors, maintaining a high proportion of renewable energy in the electricity production, encouraging the use of biofuels in the transportation sector, and reducing deforestation.

Other elements include a moratorium on the selling of soybeans that come from deforested areas of the Brazilian Amazon, and the elimination of ozone-damaging chlorofluorocarbon gases (CFCs) with the replacement of one million old refrigerators per year.

"This initiative is important because it helps to incorporate climate issues into all government programs and projects," said Suzana Kahn Ribeiro, secretary of climate change and environment quality of the Brazilian Ministry of Environment. She adds that another important task of the new plan is to foster public awareness about climate change and its impacts on Brazil.

To support the plan, the Brazilian government will create economic, technical, political and institutional mechanisms, such as laws and funding, over the next few years.

The plan will be delivered in phases, beginning in 2009. "The National Plan on Climate Change is a dynamic project. During its execution, we can add new goals and strategies if necessary," says Ribeiro.

Brazil's National Plan on Climate Change, in Portuguese:

http://www.mma.gov.br/index.php?ido=conteudo.monta&idEstrutura=169

SciDev

Tags:

You May Also Like

Finance Minister Sees Long Cycle of Growth for Brazil

Latin American ended mixed. While traders booked profits in Brazil, strength in the U.S. ...

Brazilian Workers Party's red star

For Brazil’s Lula Winning Is the Easy Part. It’s Ruling That Will Be Hell

Only hours away from the October 1st elections, an anxious Lula da Silva knows ...

The Poor Can Also Be Solidary with Haiti, Says Brazil’s Chancellor

At the opening of the International High Level Meeting on Haiti, the Brazilian Minister ...

First Vote on Brazil’s Mensalão Is Guilty for Corruption and Money Laundering

The first of many “votes” in the biggest corruption trial ever dealt with by ...

Brazil Ready to Become 2nd Largest Granite Exporter

China removed import duties on granite. This opens new perspectives for Brazil, one of ...

Accused of Corruption, Brazil’s Senate President Might Resign Any Minute

Brazilian senator José Sarney, the president of the Senate and a key ally of ...

Brazil’s Finance Minister Might Step Down to Coordinate Lula’s Reelection Campaign

Latin American stocks advanced, with Brazilian shares gaining on continued investor enthusiasm over Brazil’s ...

What Brazil Can Teach the World

We need to start looking elsewhere for ideas. This means rejecting the assumption that ...

Cheaper Alcohol in Brazil Brings Biggest Deflation in 8 Years

The Broad Consumer Price Index (IPCA) registered a deflation of 0.21% in June, compared ...

WWF Expedition Discovers New Fish, Frog and Tree Species in the Amazon

The Juruena-ApuÀ­ Expedition, organized by the Washington-based  World Wildlife Fund (WWF), reports that it ...