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4 CCLR 271 (2010)
Brazil's Policy on Climate Change: Recent Legislation and Challenges to Implementation

handle is hein.journals/cclr2010 and id is 277 raw text is: CCLR 312010                                                     Brazil's Policy on Climate Change  271

Brazil's Policy on Climate Change: Recent
Legislation and Challenges to Implementation
Natascha Trennepohl*
Brazil has recently approved its National Policy on Climate Change and set greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions reduction targets for 2020. Central characteristics of this policy
and obstacles to its implementation are described in this article, starting with a short
overview of Brazil's GHG emissions and energy matrix, as well as some pioneering
programs that have helped reduce GHG emissions. The adoption of this policy shows
a major shift in the country's attitude toward GHG emissions; however, there are still
important challenges in its implementation that need to be overcome.

1. Introduction
The latest climate bill signed by Brazilian President
Luiz Indcio Lula da Silva in 2009 has attracted the
attention of the press and Brazil's environmental
community. This is not surprising, given that the
law suggests the attitude of Brazil relative to cli-
mate change has significantly changed. It provides
a legal basis for the National Policy on Climate
Change (Politica Nacional sobre Mudanga do Clima,
or PNMC) and Brazil's international commitment
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The latter was
publicized a few weeks prior to the Fifteenth Con-
ference of the Parties (COP-15) of the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) in Copenhagen, and has been stated in
Brazil's formal submission of January 2010 under
the terms of the Copenhagen Accord.'
* Natascha Trennepohl is a lawyer and environmental consultant in
Brazil. She is currently completing her Ph.D. at the Faculty of Law,
Humboldt University, Berlin. She is a Research Fellow at the Earth
System Governance Project, a core project of the International
Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change
(IHDP), and she is a member of Brazil's Voluntary Carbon Market
Study Committee (established by ABNT).
1 Decision 2/CP.1 5, Copenhagen Accord, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2009/
11/Add.1, 18 to 19 December 2009.
2 See Brazil's submission N 5, Communications received from Par-
ties in relation to the listing in the chapeau of the Copenhagen
Accord, available on the Internet at: <unfccc.int/files/meetings/
application/pdf/brazilcphaccord-app2.pdf> (last accessed on 30
June 2010).

Previously, Brazil, along with other emerging
economies, had insisted that developing countries
must receive financial assistance to implement mit-
igation actions. In doing so, Brazil cited the princi-
ple of common but differentiated responsibilities
(CBDR) contained in the UNFCCC text as well as
the historic responsibility of industrialized coun-
tries for current concentrations of GHG in the
atmosphere. However, during COP-15, President
Lula emphasized Brazil's domestic commitment to
reducing GHG emissions and, even more surpris-
ingly, declared that Brazil would financially support
developing countries if necessary. Brazil further
demonstrated the need for compromise by playing
a leadership role during the final day of COP-15,
culminating in the Copenhagen Accord, earning
substantial praise. It is clear, however, that Brazil
will not entirely discard the principle of common
but differentiated responsibilities. Brazil's Copen-
hagen Accord submission2 incorporates a reference
to CBDR and states the voluntary nature of the pro-
posed actions.
Prior to an analysis of this recent legislation on
climate change and the challenges raised by its
implementation, this article sets out a short
overview of Brazil's energy matrix and emissions
profile, followed by a few examples of early initia-
tives adopted to reduce GHG emissions. Thus, this
article will address the following: Brazil's emissions
and energy profiles, as well as initial programs
related to the reduction of GHG emissions; the
main characteristics of the National Policy on Cli-
mate Change; key challenges to the implementa-

CCLR 3|2010

Brazil's Policy on Climate Change | 271

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