Brazil stands at a critical juncture in its climate and development trajectory. Following its role as host of COP30, the country has a unique opportunity to align its climate ambitions with the financial reforms necessary to mobilize investment at scale. While Brazil has long been recognized for leadership in renewable energy, forest conservation, and sustainable agriculture, realizing its climate goals will require systemic reforms across financial, policy, and institutional domains. Progress across these areas remains uneven, highlighting the need for clear direction and coordinated action.
The Brazil Climate Finance Reform Compass was developed to provide this clarity, offering a structured assessment of where reforms are advancing and where further action is needed. Developed by the Climate Policy Initiative (CPI), the Compass maps Brazil’s policy and institutional actions across eight themes and twenty-four reform topics essential for mobilizing capital toward a green transition. By highlighting both areas of strength and gaps, the Compass provides a comprehensive view of the steps required to unlock climate finance at scale and support the country’s climate and development objectives.
Brazil’s climate finance landscape shows meaningful progress alongside persistent gaps. Key advances include the strengthening of institutional and regulatory frameworks for sustainable finance, the New Forest Code, the launch of a national taxonomy, improved disclosure rules, and the introduction of sovereign sustainability instruments. Momentum is also evident in agriculture and land use policies, with efforts to expand climate-smart production systems and enhance planning for mitigation and adaptation. These areas form the strongest foundations in the reform landscape.
At the same time, significant opportunities remain for growth in climate investment. Private sector engagement in adaptation is limited, and project preparation capacity is insufficient across sectors. Fiscal tools, such as climate-aware budgeting or debt instruments designed to absorb climate shocks, are still underdeveloped. Incentive mechanisms like sectoral levies or guarantees for climate projects are needed to translate policy design into actual capital deployment.
Critical areas for action include financial mechanisms to halt and reverse deforestation, particularly carbon markets and internationally coordinated approaches. Brazil has considerable potential to generate high-integrity emissions reductions and removals. While a national carbon market law has been approved, the operational architecture for trading is still developing. Similarly, concessional finance channels relying on international cooperation remain in early stages. Though Brazil’s institutional foundations are strengthening, the financial instruments and pipelines required for scale are still emerging.
Looking ahead, the Compass serves not only as a diagnostic tool but as a roadmap for action. By bringing structure, transparency, and coherence to the reform landscape, it enables policymakers and financial actors to coordinate more effectively, prioritize high-impact reforms, and bridge remaining gaps. Ultimately, the Brazil Climate Finance Reform Compass aims to help the country build a resilient, investment-ready financial architecture capable of delivering on its climate ambitions and providing a global model for climate-aligned development.







