By Megan Darby for Climate Homeย News
Presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaroย is threatening to take Brazil out of the Paris Agreement if he wins the Octoberย election.
In an unpredictable race, the right-wing Bolsonaro isย polling secondbehindย Luiz Inรกcio Lula da Silva, the socialist former president. But โLulaโ is in jail for corruption and likely to beย disqualified by the courts, leaving a scatteredย field.
At hisย campaign launchย last month and inย subsequent interviews, Bolsonaro said he would join Donald Trumpโs US and withdraw from the Parisย pact.
That stance drew ire from UN environment chief Erik Solheim. Action on climate change would create โhealthier and wealthierโ economies, he told Climate Homeย News.
โA rejection of the Paris Agreement is a rejection of science and fact,โ Solheim said. โItโs also a false promise, because politicians who present climate action as a cost to society have got it allย wrong.โ
Lastย week, Brazilโs government releasedย a statementย declaring the country had met its 2020ย forest emissions target three yearsย early.
โThe policy message is that we can and should remain in the Paris Agreement (because) it is possible to effectively implement the commitments that have been made,โ Thiago Mendes, secretary of climate change in the Environment Ministry,ย told Reuters.
The withdrawal of such an important developing country, home to the worldโs largest rainforest, would deal a blow to international climate cooperation. While it has not been confirmed, Brazil was expected to hostย the 2019 UN climateย summit.
But Brazilianย experts downplayed theย likelihood of Bolsonaro carrying out hisย threat.
Unlike in the US, Brazil ratified the Paris Agreement through its congress, said Andrรฉ Guimarรฃes, head of the Amazon Environmental Research Instituteย (Ipam).
โHonestly, I think that there is very little chance that [a withdrawal] happens,โ he said. โMy guess is that even if Bolsonaro wins and wants to change the deal, it will not be an easyย task.โ
Citingย researchย showing that Amazon deforestation could hit rainfall and therefore agriculture,ย Guimarรฃes saidย climate action was in the national interest. โStopping deforestation is good business for Brazil, not just forย environmentalists.โ
Bolsonaro has not elaborated on why he opposes the Paris Agreement, but some clues can be found in his social mediaย activity.
Last August, Bolsonaro shared an interview with Ricardo Felicio, a geographer andย prominent climate denierย whoย disputes the basic physics of the greenhouseย effect.
AQUECIMENTO GLOBAL: @moura_101 entrevista o Professor Ricardo Felรญcio! Vale a pena conferir: https://t.co/BcJShFhj4L
โ Jair Bolsonaro (@jairbolsonaro) August 14, 2017
Read more about the time climate science denier Ricardo Felicio appeared on Brazil’s most popular talkย show
The day after Trump announced hisย intentionย toย quit the Paris deal, Bolsonoro shared an article defending the decision entitled โthe greenhouseย fablesโ.
Bolsonaroโs three eldest sons, all elected officials, have been more outspoken on theย issue.
Eduardo, a federal representative from the state of Sรฃo Paulo,ย posted aย homemade videoย in January characterising the Paris deal as a globalist conspiracy. โIt doesnโt make any sense,โ he told viewers from a snowy part of the US.
A photograph, reportedly taken last week, shows Eduardo meeting former Trump adviser and far-right propagandist Steve Bannon in New York. Bannon wasย one of the strongestย White House advocates for the US to withdraw from theย deal.
Photo of Eduardo Bolsonaro – son of Brazil’s far-right presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro – with Steve Bannon, taken this past weekend in New York pic.twitter.com/vdWDzJp5Np
โ Bruce Douglas (@bruceecurb) August 6, 2018
Carlos, a city councillor in Rio de Janeiro, blamed the โleftist agendaโ for climate change getting media coverage inย a 2016 tweet.ย He asserted โ against all evidence โ that the world wasย cooling.
Flavio, a federal representative in Rio, hasย called global warming a โfraudโ.
It comes as Brazil faces international pressure to tackle an up-tick in deforestation, particularly from Norway, which supports forest protection efforts through the Amazon Fund. Last year, Norway more thanย halved its annual paymentย to $35 million, citing poorย results.
In 2016 and 2017,ย Brazil recorded its highest ratesย of tree clearance this century. NGO Imazonโs monthly data showed a further spike in June,ย Mongabay reports.
Michel Temerโs administration hasย courted the beef lobby, rolling back forest protectionsย to allow the expansion of cattle ranches, soy plantations andย mines.
Ten scientistsย wrote inย a letter to the journal Nature Climate Changeย last month that such moves jeopardised Brazilโs climate goals. โThe abandonment of deforestation control policies and the political support for predatory agricultural practices make it impossible to meet targets consistent with Brazilโs contribution to a 2C world,โ theyย said.
Climate Action Tracker notesย the 2020 target, which the government claimed as an early win, was in fact already mostly achieved inย 2012, having been weakenedย by artificially inflating the โbusiness as usualโย baseline.
The outlook for meeting the tougher 2030 targets is poor based on current trends, according to analyst Paola Parra: โIt is not looking great for deforestation for theย future.โ
Ipamโs Guimarรฃes agreed. โIt is very easy to play with numbers,โ he said. โAt some point in the future, the challenge for Brazil is to stopย deforestation.โ
Bruno Toledoย contributed research to thisย article.
Image: Familia Bolsonaro/Flickr CC0
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