Online events 24b4x

Potential impacts of COP26 on Brazilian agribusiness 2q3ap

October 19th, 2021 4j293d

The UN Conference on Climate Change (COP26), to be held in Glasgow, Scotland, in November, seeks ways to avoid global warming exceeding 1.5º C. To address this issue, the next CEBRI-Insper meeting will focus on two key aspects related to Articles 4 and 6 of the Paris Agreement. The first refers to the updating of each country's national climate commitments (NDCs) and, the second, to the operationalization of international mechanisms for the transfer of carbon credits. Brazil has the potential to assume a relevant NDC. Advances represented by RenovaBio and other developments, such as the recently approved legislation on Payments for Environmental Services (PES), together with a regulated carbon market in Brazil, will the country's ambition. 2mu1o

The Brazilian agribusiness sector is capable of being a protagonist in the global transition to a low carbon economy, based on different practices already adopted, and on other transformations that are underway. The way the sector will be able to contribute to this transition, and also to benefit from it, depends largely on the market framework that emerges from COP26.

Date: 4w4se

October 19th, 2021

Location: a3o31

Online Event

Time: 4253

6 to 7h30pm BRT

Language: 103k1j

Portuguese only

Share 2m323q

The UN Conference on Climate Change (COP26), to be held in Glasgow, Scotland, in November, seeks ways to avoid global warming exceeding 1.5º C. To address this issue, the next CEBRI-Insper meeting will focus on two key aspects related to Articles 4 and 6 of the Paris Agreement. The first refers to the updating of each country's national climate commitments (NDCs) and, the second, to the operationalization of international mechanisms for the transfer of carbon credits. Brazil has the potential to assume a relevant NDC. Advances represented by RenovaBio and other developments, such as the recently approved legislation on Payments for Environmental Services (PES), together with a regulated carbon market in Brazil, will the country's ambition.

The Brazilian agribusiness sector is capable of being a protagonist in the global transition to a low carbon economy, based on different practices already adopted, and on other transformations that are underway. The way the sector will be able to contribute to this transition, and also to benefit from it, depends largely on the market framework that emerges from COP26.

Opening and Moderation 5sl12

Marcos Jank 2b725d
Trustee 58685n

Senior Professor of Agribusiness at INSPER

Julia Dias Leite 693dh
CEO at CEBRI 3a5d20

Participants 6y1p4g

Ana Toni 4g4u1m
Trustee 58685n

National Secratary for Climate Change at the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change

André Meloni Nassar 3my6w
Executive President at the Brazilian Association of Vegetable Oil Industries (ABIOVE) t164j

Fernando Camargo 136qp
Secretary of Innovation, Rural Development and Irrigation and Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock h6f5j

Marcello Brito 4p673h
President of the Brazilian Agribusiness Association (ABAG) 164yo

PROGRAM EVENTS n76v

BRAZIL'S LEADINGINTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THINK TANK 1e3h57

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