Brazil Updates: Biden and Lula Advance Environmental and Climate Agendas, Brazil Makes Progress on Other Chemical Regulatory Initiatives


The Brazilian government continues to fulfill its early commitment to combat the climate crisis, end deforestation, promote sustainable development, and enable energy transition, maintaining the trend reported in our two news alerts from November 2022 and January 2023. In the past 30 days, top leaders from Brazil and the U.S. met three times in São Paulo, Brasilia, and Washington D.C., to align on these subjects. In this alert, we will cover: how these meetings went; the next steps for both countries; and important regulatory advances and initiatives of Brazilian federal and state agencies concerning emerging contaminants, ozone-depleting substances’ wastes, and the oil & gas and telecommunications sectors.

The Brazilian Minister of Environment and Climate Change (Ministério do Meio Ambiente e Mudança do Clima - MMA), Ms. Marina Silva, hosted, in Brasilia, on February 28, 2023, the United States Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, Mr. John Kerry, concluding a series of work meetings held in the Brazilian Capital on February 26 and 27.  During the dialogue, Minister Silva and Secretary Kerry pledged to reconvene the U.S.-Brazil Climate Change Working Group, established in 2015, and discuss areas of cooperation such as fighting deforestation and degradation, bolstering clean energy deployment, strengthening adaptation, and promoting low-emission agriculture practices. Kerry and Silva also agreed to work together under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the Paris Agreement, the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol, and through initiatives such as the Global Methane Pledge.  Secretary Kerry reiterated the U.S. intent to support the Amazon Fund as a component of the bilateral partnership and to mobilize additional support from the international community for this important initiative. Marina Silva, in turn, addressed the results and recommendations of the first meeting of the Steering Committee of the Amazon Fund (Comitê Orientador do Fundo Amazônia - COFA), as well as priorities and strategies of the Brazilian government to act in preventing and combating deforestation, promote sustainable development in the Amazon region, including urgent support for indigenous populations and the fight against illegal mining activities. John Kerry stated he would return to Brazil in the coming months and accepted an invitation from Marina Silva to visit the Amazon region.

The meetings in Brazil followed Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s first official visit with President Biden at the White House in Washington, D.C., on February 10, 2023. President Biden announced his intent to work with the U.S. Congress to provide funds to protect and conserve the Brazilian Amazon, including initial support for the Amazon Fund. Find the White House’s Join Statement following Biden and Lula’s meeting here.

On February 16, 2023, the Consul General of the United States in São Paulo, David Hodge, accompanied by the Consul for Economic Affairs, Darryl Turner, visited the newly elected CEO of the São Paulo State environmental agency (Companhia Ambiental do Estado de São Paulo CETESB), the environmental attorney and biologist, Mr. Thomaz Toledo. Hodge took the opportunity to reaffirm the commitment of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to the São Paulo Environmental Agency (CETESB), a long-standing commitment since the end of the 1980s. Thomaz recalled that while São Paulo is the wealthiest state in the Brazilian nation, it continues to face very sensitive environmental problems, where the support from EPA to CETESB was of fundamental importance. In turn, Dodge showed interest in understanding CETESB’s and the new government’s priorities in relation to the environment. In the end, both reaffirmed the continuity of the mutual collaboration relating to the environment between the U.S. and São Paulo governments.

Other Relevant Updates

  1. Prevention, mitigation, and fight against fraud in the digital ecosystem;

  2. Digital Literacy, and

  3. Support, articulation, and cooperation for the development of new technologies.

  1. Promoting quality and transparency in the fixed band offer;

  2. Improved infrastructure quality and capacity; and

  3. Modernization of inspection mechanisms.


© 2025 Beveridge & Diamond PC
National Law Review, Volume XIII, Number 66