Brazil is reinstating stricter greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction targets that were previously announced in 2015 under the Paris climate agreement.
The country's newly formed climate change committee (CIM) issued a decree revoking changes to Brazil's 2020 nationally determined contribution (NDC), which were made during the government of former president Jair Bolsonaro.
The previous NDC presented at the UN's Cop 26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, raised the emissions levels of the 2005 base year to 2.8bn t CO2e t of CO2e from 2.1bn t CO2e, following a methodological change to the emissions inventory. With higher base-year emissions, Brazil's 2030 target net emissions levels increased to 1.8bn t CO2e from 1.2bn t CO2e. The changes would have allowed the country to increase emissions and still meet its targets under the agreement.
The commissions' decision means that Brazil will once again have a target of net emissions of 1.2bn t CO2e for 2030, which is a 43pc reduction from 2005 levels.
The climate change committee was created in June and includes representatives from 18 government ministries. It has launched a total of five decrees as the country works to bolster its image ahead of the Cop 28 meeting at the end of the year.
The committee announced the creation of a working group to update its national climate change plan and one to elaborate the country's new emissions reduction targets.
A separate group will be responsible for regulating and implementing the Brazilian emissions trading system (SBCE), which will be created when the country passes legislation for a new carbon market. The bill is in congress waiting for approval.

