Wednesday, December 31, 2025
  • Login
198 Brazil News
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • BUSINESS NEWS
  • FEATURED NEWS
    • BRAZIL USA TRADE NEWS
    • BRAZIL INDIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL NIGERIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL UK NEWS
    • BRAZIL EU NEWS
    • BRAZIL RUSSIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS
    • BRAZIL GULF NATIONS NEWS
  • POLITICAL NEWS
  • MORE NEWS
    • BRAZIL CEO NETWORKS
    • BRAZIL CRYPTO NEWS
    • BRAZIL IMMIGRATION NEWS
    • BRAZIL TECHNOLOGY NEWS
    • BRAZIL MANUFACTURERS
    • BRAZIL JOINT VENTURE NEWS
    • BRAZIL AGRICULTURE NEWS
    • BRAZIL UNIVERSITIES
    • BRAZIL VENTURE CAPITAL NEWS
    • BRAZIL PARTNERSHIP NEWS
    • BRAZIL BUSINESS HELP
    • BRAZIL EDUCATION NEWS
  • ASK IKE LEMUWA
  • Contact us
  • Home
  • BUSINESS NEWS
  • FEATURED NEWS
    • BRAZIL USA TRADE NEWS
    • BRAZIL INDIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL NIGERIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL UK NEWS
    • BRAZIL EU NEWS
    • BRAZIL RUSSIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS
    • BRAZIL GULF NATIONS NEWS
  • POLITICAL NEWS
  • MORE NEWS
    • BRAZIL CEO NETWORKS
    • BRAZIL CRYPTO NEWS
    • BRAZIL IMMIGRATION NEWS
    • BRAZIL TECHNOLOGY NEWS
    • BRAZIL MANUFACTURERS
    • BRAZIL JOINT VENTURE NEWS
    • BRAZIL AGRICULTURE NEWS
    • BRAZIL UNIVERSITIES
    • BRAZIL VENTURE CAPITAL NEWS
    • BRAZIL PARTNERSHIP NEWS
    • BRAZIL BUSINESS HELP
    • BRAZIL EDUCATION NEWS
  • ASK IKE LEMUWA
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
198 Brazil News
No Result
View All Result
Home BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa: Governments Must Back $125bn TFFF Forest Fund With Stronger Finance Laws

by Gias
August 22, 2025
in BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
Africa: Governments Must Back 5bn TFFF Forest Fund With Stronger Finance Laws
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


The Brazilian Presidency’s flagship conservation finance initiative for COP30 – the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) – must be supported by sponsor governments also introducing stronger rules to close loopholes that allow the financing of deforestation, Global Witness has warned.

The Government of Brazil today released its latest plans for the $125 billion initiative, which aims to raise capital from public and private sources, invest it in global markets, and direct a portion of profits to tropical forest countries as an incentive to keep forests standing, with a share earmarked for Indigenous Peoples and local communities.

While the TFFF is designed in part to address gaps in global finance for forests, Global Witness says its potential impact will be undermined if governments continue to allow trillions from banks and investors to flow into activities that drive deforestation.

Progress, but key gaps remain

The third TFFF concept note takes important steps forward, recognising the leadership and rights of Indigenous Peoples and local communities (IP&LCs). Crucially, it proposes direct access to finance for IP&LCs and new enforcement rules that would cut off countries failing to pass funds onto these communities. It also rules out investments in deforestation and other major climate polluters such as coal, peat, oil, and gas – a demand strongly supported by Global Witness and civil society.

But ambition still falls short. Concerningly, the fund currently commits a minimum of just 20% of payments to IPLCs, despite their indispensable role in protecting forests. Additionally, while the TFFF has made strides in announcing a deforestation-free investment strategy, it cannot alone enforce binding rules on banks or investors more widely, who continue to play an outsized role in funding global deforestation.

The real accountability now lies with the national governments backing the fund: without strong laws to stop financial actors funnelling trillions into businesses responsible for forest destruction, Global Witness says world leaders are likely to miss their 2030 goal to halt and reverse deforestation.

Global Witness Senior Policy Advisor Ashley Thomson said:

“This fund could be a lifeline for forest conservation, but forests aren’t just at risk from neglect. They’re being destroyed by banks and investors financing deforestation. National governments must act now with binding rules, or it’s like bailing out a sinking ship without fixing the hole.”

“We welcome the TFFF’s commitment to deforestation-free investments and now urge the fund to adopt strong safeguards to deliver this promise. Forest protection cannot be paid for with the profits of its own destruction. That should go without saying.”

A crisis the world can’t afford

Deforestation – responsible for about 11% of global greenhouse gas emissions – is expected to be a key issue at COP30, hosted later this year in the Amazon state of Belém, Brazil.

Tropical primary forest loss surged in 2024, with trees vanishing at the rate of 18 football fields per minute, nearly double the 2023 rate – threatening to push the Amazon towards an irreversible ‘dieback’ tipping point.

Recent Global Witness investigations have shown the staggering role of global finance in driving this destruction:

The latest Forest 500 report by Global Canopy finds that 150 financial institutions poured a staggering US $8.9 trillion into the deforestation economy in 2024 alone. Global Witness is urging TFFF sponsor governments – particularly wealthy nations whose financial centres channel billions into deforestation, such as the US, UK, China and EU – to introduce binding laws requiring all banks, asset managers, and investors to carry out checks to prevent deforestation businesses accessing the financial system.

Sign up for free AllAfrica Newsletters

Get the latest in African news delivered straight to your inbox


Success!

Almost finished…

We need to confirm your email address.

To complete the process, please follow the instructions in the email we just sent you.


Error!

There was a problem processing your submission. Please try again later.

Global Witness also urge the TFFF to amend its design to maximise payments to IPLCs beyond the currently planned 20% share of profits, and grant them central decision-making power in the fund’s operations.

Thomson added:

“We welcome every serious effort to keep forests standing.

“But unless governments pair their investments in the TFFF with strong laws to cut off the cash fuelling deforestation, the fund risks protecting banks’ reputations more than it protects forests.”

Contacts

Molly Robson, Communications Advisor



Source link

Tags: 125bnAfricafinanceforestfundGovernmentslawsstrongerTFFF
Previous Post

Here’s the Trump, Putin, Zelenskyy talks host short list – POLITICO

Next Post

Africa: Brics Expansion in 2026 – ‘We Want More African Nations in Brics!’

Related Posts

Africa: UN Sounds Alarm Over Rising Demands On Water Resources As Scarcity Increases
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa: UN Sounds Alarm Over Rising Demands On Water Resources As Scarcity Increases

by Gias
December 15, 2025
Africa: Five Climate Trailblazers – UNEP’s 2025 Champions of the Earth
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa: Five Climate Trailblazers – UNEP’s 2025 Champions of the Earth

by Gias
December 11, 2025
Africa Doesn’t Need More Climate Pledges. It Needs Capital.
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa Doesn’t Need More Climate Pledges. It Needs Capital.

by Gias
December 10, 2025
Africa: South Africa’s G20 Presidency Is Over – What Did It Achieve for Climate and Clean Energy in Africa?
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa: South Africa’s G20 Presidency Is Over – What Did It Achieve for Climate and Clean Energy in Africa?

by Gias
December 8, 2025
Africa’s Fight With Global Credit Ratings – Bias or Hard Reality?
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa’s Fight With Global Credit Ratings – Bias or Hard Reality?

by Gias
December 3, 2025
Next Post
Africa: Brics Expansion in 2026 – ‘We Want More African Nations in Brics!’

Africa: Brics Expansion in 2026 - 'We Want More African Nations in Brics!'

Germany looking to end reliance on US tech giant – Bild — RT World News

Germany looking to end reliance on US tech giant – Bild — RT World News

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Uber considers acquiring parking app SpotHero: Report
  • Trump Media just launched five ‘Made in America’ ETFs, testing whether political power is an investable theme
  • RBI flags global risks but says India’s financial system remains resilient
  • New Year 2026 fireworks live stream from Auckland, Sydney and London | World | News
  • Machu Picchu train crash leaves one dead and dozens injured

Categories

  • BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS
  • BRAZIL AGRICULTURE NEWS
  • BRAZIL BUSINESS HELP
  • BRAZIL CRYPTO NEWS
  • BRAZIL EDUCATION NEWS
  • BRAZIL EU NEWS
  • BRAZIL GULF NATIONS NEWS
  • BRAZIL IMMIGRATION NEWS
  • BRAZIL INDIA NEWS
  • BRAZIL JOINT VENTURE NEWS
  • BRAZIL MANUFACTURERS
  • BRAZIL NIGERIA NEWS
  • BRAZIL PARTNERSHIP NEWS
  • BRAZIL POLITICAL NEWS
  • BRAZIL RUSSIA NEWS
  • BRAZIL TECHNOLOGY NEWS
  • BRAZIL UK NEWS
  • BRAZIL UNIVERSITIES
  • BRAZIL USA TRADE NEWS
  • BRAZIL VENTURE CAPITAL NEWS
  • BUSINESS NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
  • VIDEO NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
  • Home
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2025 198 Brazil News.
All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Contact
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Read the latest updates from Brazil
  • Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2025 198 Brazil News.
All Rights Reserved.