In Brazil, Amazônia 2030 (Amazon 2030), with the support of BVRio, a leading non-profit organisation dedicated to advancing economic, environmental, and social sustainability, and Igarapé Institute, a global independent "think and do tank" focused on advancing agendas in the areas of climate, citizen and digital security, has released a concept note on a Tropical Forests Mechanism (TFM) aimed at supporting nature finance at scale to guarantee the maintenance and enhancement of tropical forests worldwide.
The Tropical Forests Mechanism (TFM) is expected to complement the Brazilian government’s Tropical Forests Forever Fund (TFFF), announced at COP28, to secure funding to protect rainforests in the Amazon region, Congo Basin, and Southeast Asia.
These three basins hold most of the world’s 1.2 billion hectares (ha) of tropical forests, and it is estimated that annual payments of US$ 30 per ha would provide enough incentives for their protection.
The oil and gas sector, producing approximately 30 billion barrels a year, could provide most of the funding needed with a US$ 1 per barrel contribution.
Published ahead of the G20 Finance Ministers’ Meeting, the concept note proposes rules and procedures for distributing annual payments among tropical countries and to guide the application of resources within participating countries to maximize the impact in the conservation of tropical forests.
Tropical forests provide ecosystem services of inestimable value to humanity and are at the same time victims and heroes of climate change. We need an agile and simple global mechanism that mobilizes large amounts of resources to protect and restore tropical forests. This is the core of the Tropical Forest Mechanism proposal, said Tasso Azevedo, Former General Director of the Brazilian Forest Service, and collaborator of Amazônia 2030.
Focus on forest acreage
The TFM focuses on ‘hectares of forests’ rather than ‘tonnes of carbon’ as its primary metric, supporting the provision of environmental services such as carbon storage, biodiversity conservation, climate regulation, water retention, and benefits to forest stewards and inhabitants.
Unlike traditional carbon markets, the approach avoids challenges related to additionality, leakage, and permanence, allowing for an effective conservation effort.
We know that the ecosystem services provided by the planet, on which more than half of the world’s GDP depends, are invaluable. Yet, to avoid the tipping point of tropical forests, we need to create financial instruments to promote conservation and restoration. The Mechanism presented here is another tool that, like the TFFF, advances by offering a financial solution that, to cover the opportunity cost of land uses resulting in forest degradation, incentivizes the conservation of standing forests and more effectively rewards those who protect them, said Ilona Szabó de Carvalho, Igarapé Institute Co-founder and President.
Key features of the TFM include:
- Global financial support: Encourages resource-intensive sectors to contribute, aiming for a minimum of US$ 1 per barrel of oil produced, potentially generating up to US$ 30 billion annually.
- Annual payments for forest conservation: The TFM proposes to allocate US$ 30 per hectare of forest to tropical countries, promoting forest maintenance and enhancement.
- Penalties for deforestation: The TFM also supports imposing a US$ 3,000 penalty for each hectare of deforestation, incentivizing countries to reduce forest loss, in the same rationale employed by Brazil’s proposed TFFF.
- Eligibility Criteria: Ensures countries must meet strict deforestation reduction targets and support local communities and forest stewards.
- Fast implementation: by not having complex baselines and financial instruments, it allows countries to achieve qualification in the short term, enabling rapid implementation of the mechanism and thus accelerating the achievement of the global goal of ending deforestation.
Support Brazil’s proposed TFFF
The TFM is expected to complement and support the Brazilian government’s TFFF, garnering a conceptual framework from the civil society organizations that support the mechanism.
The TFFF underscores Brazil’s commitment to environmental protection, setting a powerful example for other countries that aligns with the growing interest in nature-based solutions for climate change following a significant decrease in Amazon deforestation since early last year.
In this sense, the TFM can be supported by a Global Pledge for Tropical Forests, through which companies would actively contribute to conserving the world’s tropical rainforests, fostering a global alliance for sustainability and environmental stewardship.
At a moment when most financial mechanisms for the protection and maintenance of forests are proving to have limited potential for sourcing and deploying capital at scale, the Tropical Forests Mechanism Global Pledge for Tropical Forests provides an alternative approach that could be pursued to avert catastrophic losses of tropical forests worldwide, said Pedro Moura Costa, BVRio Director and Co-founder.