Collaborative schemes with the Brazilian financial institutions and Brazilian Development Bank goal to support Brazil to bring its G20 Presidency climate finance primacies and determined climate goals
United Nations Secretary-General’s Special Representative on Climate Drive and Solutions and Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ) Co-Chair Michael R. Bloomberg and United Nations Secretary-General’s Special Envoy on Climate Action and Finance and GFANZ Co-Chair Mark Carney proclaimed two innovative initiatives from GFANZ to help funding Brazil’s striving climate transition tactics and advance the climate economics priorities of its G20 Presidency. Operating with the Brazilian financial institutions and the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES), these initiatives will emphasize scaling climate transition investment across the Brazilian economy in backing the Government’s determined green growth agenda.
“Brazil has an exclusive blend of resources and competencies that position the country to help lead the global transition to clean energy and lower releases – and as President of the G20 this year and President of the United Nations’s COP30 climate meeting in 2025, Brazil now has a significant opportunity to display the world how fighting climate variation, increasing the economy, and scattering prosperity are all interrelated,” said Michael R. Bloomberg, United Nations Special Envoy on Climate Drive and Solutions and Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero Co-Chair. “These new corporations will foster public-private partnership to help investment innovative climate schemes and turn Brazil’s determined plans into reality.”
“They are learning new possibilities to quicken Brazil’s green reindustrialization,” stated by President of the Brazilian Development Bank, Aloizio Mercadante. “This corporation between Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero Co-Chair and BNDES will assist in creating innovative opportunities for global investments on this front.”
Reinforced by the country’s modernized Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) and climate drives, Brazil purposes to reduce its releases by 50% by 2030, with the potential to turn out to be the first G20 nation to reach net zero while producing employment and spreading wealth. This comprises an ambitious goal line for manufacturing decarbonization, renewables, sustainable transport, bio-economy, green hydrogen, and ecosystem restoration.