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What is the ‘Tropical Forest Forever’ fund and will it work?

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Led by COP30 host Brazil, 12 countries are finalising a fund that aims to raise USD 125 billion for tropical forest conservation and launch at the November climate summit

A western lowland gorilla in Odzala-Kokoua National Park, Republic of the Congo. The Tropical Forest Forever Facility aims to contribute to the conservation of tropical and subtropical rainforests in developing countries (Image: Roger de la Harpe / Danita Delimont / Alamy)

A western lowland gorilla in Odzala-Kokoua National Park, Republic of the Congo. The Tropical Forest Forever Facility aims to contribute to the conservation of tropical and subtropical rainforests in developing countries (Image: Roger de la Harpe / Danita Delimont / Alamy)

In 2023, during the United Nations’ Climate Week in New York, Carlos Rittl of the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) warned Brazil’s environment minister Marina Silva about the critical situation of the world’s forests: 25% had already been destroyed.

This figure comes from WCS research, published in Nature Communications in 2020, which also revealed that of the 4.3 billion hectares of forests left on the planet, only 40% – or 1.7 billion hectares – remain practically intact. Less than 30% of these areas are officially protected.

“Forests in their natural state play an essential role for the climate, biodiversity and people’s survival. But there is a huge challenge to prevent their degradation and deforestation,” said Rittl, WCS’s director of public policy for forest and climate.

Data source: Grantham et al, 2020 • Graphic: Dialogue Earth

The 2023 meeting marked the beginning of WCS’s partnership with the Brazilian government to create an innovative financing initiative to tackle this scenario: the Tropical Forest Forever Facility. Here’s everything you need to know about it.

What is the Tropical Forest Forever Facility?

The Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) aims to contribute to the conservation of tropical and subtropical rainforests in developing countries. In all, there are 1.2 billion hectares of these green areas spread over 76 countries, largely concentrated in the Amazon, the Congo Basin and Southeast Asia.

“The aim of the TFFF is to reward countries that are already controlling their levels of deforestation, but still need to invest to keep forests standing,” said Garo Batmanian, director-general of the Brazilian Forest Service, the body that manages Brazil’s public forests and which represented the ministry in drawing up the fund.

Garo Batmanian, director-general of the Brazilian Forest Service, presenting the TFFF at the COP16 biodiversity summit in Cali, Colombia, October 2024. The fund will reward countries that are controlling their levels of deforestation, but still need to invest to keep forests standing (Image: André Aroeira / Brazil’s Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change, CC BY NC SA)

Garo Batmanian, director-general of the Brazilian Forest Service, presenting the TFFF at the COP16 biodiversity summit in Cali, Colombia, October 2024. The fund will reward countries that are controlling their levels of deforestation, but still need to invest to keep forests standing (Image: André Aroeira / Brazil’s Ministry of the Environment and Climate ChangeCC BY NC SA)

As well as the WCS and the Brazilian government, several other organisations have also been involved in designing the initiative, which is due to be launched at the COP30 climate summit in Belém, Brazil, in November.

What’s innovative about the TFFF?

Forest protection mechanisms generally pay for avoiding deforestation. This is usually based on calculations of the carbon that has not been released into the atmosphere by the trees being left standing. The main example is REDD+, launched at COP19 in 2013. By this logic, a country that reached zero deforestation would no longer receive financial support because it would no longer be reducing its emissions, Batmanian notes. The TFFF aims to fill this gap by continuing to pay nations for keeping forests preserved.

“Countries end up not having a direct benefit from having forests. This mechanism brings that perspective, because it sends [the payment] directly to the country and creates incentives in a stronger way,” commented Ane Alencar, director of science at the Amazon Environmental Research Institute (IPAM), which also advised on the creation of the TFFF.

Tropical forest countries that maintain or reduce deforestation will be eligible to receive annual payments of USD 4 per hectare of preserved forest. However, there will be deductions on a country’s payment for area deforested during each year: between USD 400 and USD 800 per hectare. Degraded areas, with disrupted environmental services, fragmentation or unsustainable practices, will receive a cut of USD 100 per hectare. These deductions, Batmanian explains, serve as an incentive for countries with already low deforestation rates to continue moving towards zero deforestation.

Aerial view of deforestation in the Amazonian state of Pará, Brazil. Tropical forest countries will receive annual payments of USD 4 per hectare of preserved forest, but a deduction of between USD 400 and USD 800 per deforested hectare (Image: Flávia Milhorance)

Aerial view of deforestation in the Amazonian state of Pará, Brazil. Tropical forest countries will receive annual payments of USD 4 per hectare of preserved forest, but a deduction of between USD 400 and USD 800 per deforested hectare (Image: Flávia Milhorance)

“The great innovation is to create an incentive that includes a disincentive in the mechanism itself,” says Tasso Azevedo, general coordinator of the MapBiomas platform and one of the architects of the original idea for the mechanism.

The TFFF will also differ to other conservation schemes in how it calculates the areas of forest in question. This is because adding up the carbon stocks of all tropical countries, as is done in various mechanisms, including REDD+, would be a complex and expensive task, while forest monitoring by satellites and remote sensing is simpler and more accessible.

If a country does not have access to these systems, it can use global platforms to make the calculation, explained Leonardo Sobral, director of forests at Imaflora, another Brazil-based civil society organisation taking part in the initiative. MapBiomas, for example, monitors forest cover throughout South America and Indonesia, with plans to expand to Africa.

Who is involved?

The idea for the fund was presented by the Brazilian government in 2023, at COP28 in the United Arab Emirates. It is still being developed by the government with the technical support of various international conservation NGOs, intergovernmental agencies, finance institutions and think-tanks.

In March 2025, a steering committee met in London, UK, to finalise the design of the TFFF. The publication of a further document – the concept note 2.0 – is scheduled for April and will be followed by discussions with countries, potential investors and civil society. According to Batmanian, the final version should be completed by May.

This committee is made up of representatives from 12 countries, among them six tropical forest nations, including Brazil. The other half is made up of developed countries, which would be potential investors in the fund.

Data source: Brazilian Federal Government • Graphic: Dialogue Earth

Data source: Brazilian Federal Government • Graphic: Dialogue Earth

With the exception of the United Arab Emirates, these nations usually contribute resources to conservation. For example, Norway, Germany, France, the United States and the UK account for 60% of the USD 9.3 billion in pledges to the Green Climate Fund and, with the exception of France, are the main investors in the Amazon Fund.

How the TFFF could operate

The fund will be hosted by a multilateral institution, to be defined once its design has been finalised. One of the options is the World Bank, which has been following the discussions.

Before being launched in November, the TFFF aims to obtain a shadow ratingan unofficial credit rating attesting to low investment risk, from a rating agency. Bonds will then be made available on the market in an attempt to raise USD 125 billion for the fund.

The expectation, according to Batmanian, is to secure pledges of USD 25 billion by COP30, and leverage the additional USD 100 billion in the financial market. Batmanian believes that the product will be attractive to sovereign wealth and pension funds, which are looking for low-risk investments with long-term profitability. Philanthropy would be another focus.

The funds from the TFFF would be reinvested in safe investments, such as government bonds and other fixed-income investments. “For every 100 billion dollars, it is estimated that you would get four billion dollars a year to invest in forestry,” claimed Tasso Azevedo.

Marina Silva, Brazil’s Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, met with EU climate chief Wopke Hoekstra in Brasília this April to discuss the TFFF and COP30. The fund is planned to be hosted by an as yet undefined multilateral institution (Image: Rogério Cassimiro / Brazil’s Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change, CC BY NC SA)

Marina Silva, Brazil’s Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, met with EU climate chief Wopke Hoekstra in Brasília this April to discuss the TFFF and COP30. The fund is planned to be hosted by an as yet undefined multilateral institution (Image: Rogério Cassimiro / Brazil’s Ministry of the Environment and Climate ChangeCC BY NC SA)

According to the draft concept note 2.0, to which Dialogue Earth had access, fixed income investments will be made mainly in emerging country assets, with investments directed towards “green” and “blue” bonds associated with the “global climate transition”.

“We are adopting the principle that no investment can cause damage to the environment or health,” Batmanian added.

How countries can join the fund and use the resources for forests

To participate in the TFFF, tropical countries must have an annual deforestation rate of no more than 0.5% of the total forest area and show a downward trend in relation to the year before applying to the fund. This means being within the global average, according to the committee’s calculations.

“Many countries have already reached this rate,” noted Sobral, from Imaflora. “And so you encourage countries with higher figures to reduce their deforestation in order to enter the fund.”

Based on this criterion, Brazil would qualify to participate in the TFFF. An analysis by Dialogue Earth, based on official data from the National Institute for Space Research (INPE) and the Brazilian Forest Service, shows that the country’s Amazon and Atlantic Forest together lost 0.25% of their native vegetation in 2023 compared to the previous year. Since the fund targets the preservation of tropical rainforests, only these two biomes would be considered in the Brazilian case.

In its application, the country must present a forest monitoring system and a plan for using the resources, earmarking them for public conservation and restoration programmes. At least 20% of the funds must be earmarked for initiatives that benefit Indigenous peoples and traditional communities, Batmanian said.

Forested land cleared to make way for a plantation within the customary territory of the Pohoneang community in Seko, Indonesia. At least 20% of the funds received by rainforest countries will have to be earmarked for initiatives that benefit Indigenous peoples and traditional communities, says Batmanian (Image: Junaidi Hanafiah / Dialogue Earth)

Forested land cleared to make way for a plantation within the customary territory of the Pohoneang community in Seko, Indonesia. At least 20% of the funds received by rainforest countries will have to be earmarked for initiatives that benefit Indigenous peoples and traditional communities, says Batmanian (Image: Junaidi Hanafiah / Dialogue Earth)

At the end of each year, countries must publish monitoring reports and send them to the TFFF. To receive payment, the rate of deforestation must be stable or falling compared to the previous year.

The fund’s managers will take into account natural disasters that could destroy forests, such as hurricanes in the Caribbean or volcanic eruptions in Indonesia. In these cases, according to Batmanian, the fund will allow a variation of up to 0.1%.

He also said the rules for applying the resources will not be so rigid as to lock the mechanism in and make it impossible for countries to access: “What unites us is the fact that we have forests, but there are many different economic and social contexts between the 76 countries.”

Challenges and next steps for the TFFF

Tasso Azevedo sees a problem with the fund’s current working model. The proposed financial mechanism prioritises securities from emerging markets and developing economies in its investment portfolio, which offer higher returns, with an average interest rate of 7.6%. This includes tropical forest countries themselves.

For Azevedo, this creates a contradiction: the funds would not come from rich countries buying TFFF bonds, but rather from the proceeds of bonds issued by countries that need to offer high interest rates to attract investors – countries such as Brazil itself.

In practice, says the forestry engineer, rich countries would reap the financial benefits of investing their capital, while at the same time reinforcing their status as supporters of forest conservation. Meanwhile, the real cost of financing conservation would fall on the countries that issue the high-interest bonds.

Another challenge, according to Rittl, will be how to incorporate the monitoring of forest degradation into the fund’s criteria, as this will involve defining differing levels of impacts. The TFFF committee favours this inclusion to prevent degraded areas from potentially profiting as if they were totally preserved. That’s why it has adopted a “pragmatic proposal”, says Rittl.

Cleared and burning forest in the municipality of Apuí, Amazonas state, Brazil. The monitoring of forest degradation will be a challenge for the fund, as degraded forest can still appear standing in satellite images, as treetops sometimes do not burn (Image: Bruno Kelly / Amazônia Real, CC BY NC SA)

Cleared and burning forest in the municipality of Apuí, Amazonas state, Brazil. The monitoring of forest degradation will be a challenge for the fund, as degraded forest can still appear standing in satellite images, as treetops sometimes do not burn (Image: Bruno Kelly / Amazônia RealCC BY NC SA)

“At the moment, we’re saying that the degraded forest is the area that caught fire, but that on the satellite image it still appears as forest, because the treetops haven’t burnt,” says Batmanian. “We know there are other forms of degradation. But this is the most common and widespread, and it occurs in all countries.”

Azevedo also questions whether the amount of USD 4 per hectare will be enough to discourage deforestation. For him, more important than the payment for preserved forest is the weight of the penalty: in an original proposal, the deduction was pitched at USD 3,000 per hectare deforested. “Virtually none of the major commodities that cause deforestation yield more than USD 3,000 per hectare. Now, if the payment is USD 4, the disincentive wouldn’t be so great,” he says.

What is expected of the fund

According to those involved in its creation, the expectation is that the TFFF, as well as potentially contributing to global climate stability by protecting carbon stocks and preventing greenhouse gas emissions, could also generate real impacts on the lives of local communities and the preservation of biodiversity.

If the TFFF is able to mobilise investments on the scale we want, of 125 billion dollars, it will truly be the largest source of resources for forest protection we have ever seen in history
- Carlos Rittl of the Wildlife Conservation Society

“Before we knew about climate change, the forest was already important for maintaining water, biodiversity, and for local communities and Indigenous peoples,” said Batmanian.

Although the TFFF is not linked to international commitments, Batmanian argued that the initiative can contribute to the fulfilment of global climate pledges such as the Paris Agreement, the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and the Convention to Combat Desertification. 

Carlos Rittl, from WCS, argues that the TFFF should continue without imposing specific laws or policies on the member countries, respecting their sovereignty. But he believes the payments could support the creation of public policies on climate action, strengthen monitoring systems, protect Indigenous rights and improve the living conditions of local communities.

For Rittl, COP30 in Belém will be a unique opportunity to make the initiative a reality and an instrument of real transformation: “If the TFFF is able to mobilise investments on the scale we want, of 125 billion dollars, it will truly be the largest source of resources for forest protection we have ever seen in history.”


  • This article was originally published on Dialogue Earth under the Creative Commons BY NC ND licence. Read the original article.

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