Norway has made a massive $3 billion bet on Brazil’s new climate vision, providing the anchor investment for the “Tropical Forests Forever Facility.” This pledge, the largest of the day at the Belem summit, is a powerful endorsement of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s ambitious plan.
The total pledges for the new fund have already reached $5.5 billion, with Germany expected to add its own commitment. This capital is intended to kickstart a new financial model for conservation, one that could halt the destruction of tropical rainforests.
Lula’s proposal is a “pay-to-preserve” system. The fund will be used to compensate 74 developing countries for keeping their forests intact, directly challenging the economic incentives that currently favor logging, mining, and ranching.
The fund’s reliance on interest-bearing debt from wealthy nations and investors, rather than donations, is a key innovation. It aims to create a sustainable and scalable financial stream to protect the world’s most important carbon sinks.
This financial momentum, led by Norway, is a crucial victory for Lula, especially at a summit marked by division. The absence of leaders from the US, China, and India, and dire warnings from the UN, have cast a shadow, but the $5.5 billion in pledges offers a tangible path forward.
