Brazil Appoints Luiz Alberto Figueiredo As Ambassador For Climate Change

Published date20 March 2023
Subject MatterEnvironment, Environmental Law, Climate Change
Law FirmCadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP
AuthorMr Duncan Grieve

On February 17, the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs appointed Luiz Alberto Figueiredo as the Brazilian Ambassador for Climate Change. Figueiredo is an experienced diplomat who previously served as Brazil's permanent representative to the UN and as the Brazilian ambassador to the United States, Portugal, and Qatar. He also served as the Minister of Foreign Affairs in the administration of former-president, Dilma Rousseff, between August 2013 and December 2014.

As the Ambassador for Climate Change, Figueiredo will be responsible for ensuring that Brazil has high-level representation at international events and that the country is globally engaged in discussions regarding climate change. He will also promote Brazil's candidacy to host the 30th UN Climate Change Conference (COP30) in the Amazonian city of Belém in 2025.

Figueiredo's appointment is an additional signal by President Lula's new administration that it intends to make environmental protection and climate-related initiatives a key priority. As we previously reported in January, Lula's Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, Marina Silva, made significant changes to the structure of the Ministry of the Environment, foreshadowing a reactivation of federal environmental protection agencies. Soon after, the Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (Ibama), carried out the first significant environmental enforcement activity under the new administration, targeting illegal deforestation in the Amazon region. In February, the Brazilian Federal Police, Ibama, and the National Indigenous People Foundation (FUNAI), carried out raids and enforcement activity targeting wildcat gold mining enterprises that have illegally invaded Brazil's largest indigenous reservation. The activity of more than 20,000 illegal miners in the protected Amazon reserve has led to armed violence, infant mortality, and disease among the native Yanomami population and was declared a public health emergency by the Brazilian government and international...

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