Brazil charges 31 people in major carbon credit fraud investigation

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Summary

Brazil鈥檚 Federal Police have indicted 31 suspects for fraud and land-grabbing in a massive criminal carbon credit scheme in the Brazilian Amazon, according to Brazilian national media outlet Folha de S.Paulo. It is the largest known criminal operation involving carbon credit fraud to date in the nation. The police probe, called Operation Greenwashing, was launched following an investigation by Mongabay reporter Fernanda Wenzel published in May 2024 about two REDD+ carbon credit projects that appeared to be linked to illegal timber laundering. The Netherlands-based Center for Climate Crime Analysis (CCCA) analyzed the REDD+ projects, called Unitor and Fortaleza Ituxi, at Mongabay鈥檚 request, finding a mismatch between their declared volume of logged timber and the logged volume estimated through satellite images, suggesting possible timber laundering. The police investigation confirmed that two REDD+ project areas were generating carbon credits at the same time they were being used to launder timber taken from other illegally deforested areas. Both projects, which cover more than 140,000 hectares (around 350,000 acres), are located in the municipality of L谩brea in the south of Amazonas state. The area has been identified as one of the newest and most aggressive deforestation frontiers in the Brazilian Amazon. Brazil police found that the Unitor and Fortaleza Ituxi REDD+ projects were being used to launder illegal timber while selling carbon credits. Map by Andr茅s Alegr铆a/Mongabay. The Federal Police told Folha that three interconnected groups were involved. One group was led by Ricardo Stoppe J煤nior, known as Brazil鈥檚 largest individual seller of carbon credits. He has actively participated in climate talks and public events promoting his business model, including during the COP28 climate summit hosted in the United Arab Emirates. Stoppe has sold millions of dollars in carbon credits to corporations including Nestl茅, Toshiba, Spotify, Boeing and PwC. The other two wer...

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