No. 46 (2021): World-ecology, Capitalocene and Global Accumulation - Part 1
Articles

Green bonds in the world-ecology: capital, nature and power in the financialized expansion of the forestry industry in Brazil

Iagê Miola
Federal University of São Paulo (Unifesp)
Bio
Gabriela de Oliveira Junqueira
University of São Paulo (USP)
Bio
Flávio Prol
Brazilian Center for Analysis and Planning (CEBRAP)
Bio
Marcela Vecchione-Gonçalves
Center for Advanced Amazonian Studies of the Federal University of Pará (UFPA)
Bio
Tomaso Ferrando
Institute of Development Policy, University of Antwerp
Bio
Héctor Herrera
University of Antwerp
Bio
Número 46
Published February 28, 2021

Keywords:

green economy, green bonds, financialization of nature, forestry, world-ecology
How to Cite
Miola, I., Junqueira, G. de O., Prol, F., Vecchione-Gonçalves, M., Ferrando, T., & Herrera, H. . (2021). Green bonds in the world-ecology: capital, nature and power in the financialized expansion of the forestry industry in Brazil. Relaciones Internacionales, (46), 161–180. https://doi.org/10.15366/relacionesinternacionales2021.46.009

Abstract

The 2008 financial crisis opened the doors of green capitalism as a financially sound approach to saving the planet from the worst effects of the climate emergency. The emphasis on the role of finance in promoting “green growth” has permeated mainstream political, academic and business approaches to climate change adaptation and mitigation, assuming multiple forms - from the carbon markets of the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement, to the Environmental, Social and Governance taxonomy for “green” investments, to the proliferation of sustainable labels in several economic sectors. The present article offers a critical appraisal of one of the most prominent arguments that upholds the idea that it is possible and desirable to achieve sustainability and economic growth through finance: green bonds.

 

Green bonds are debt instruments whose proceeds are earmarked to fund projects with supposedly environmental benefits. After some years in the background, they now occupy a central position in the green recovery narrative and political framework all over the world. Most of the academic literature tends to naturalize green bonds as an eminently technical solution to reconcile economic growth and environmental sustainability. Filling an epistemological gap, the present article leverages a world-ecology approach to embed the financial phenomenon of green bonds within the broader picture of the capitalist political economy and the expansion of its ecological frontier. In light of the ongoing experiences that the authors have been following in the Brazilian legal, financial and political context, the article unpacks and makes sense of green bonds as a tool in the hands of climate finance that reproduces global patterns of North-South uneven development and the shifting of ecological costs.

 

To test the potential of the “interpretative framework” offered by a world-ecology approach, we mobilize it in the concrete case of green bonds issuances directed to fund the forestry sector in Brazil. Aware that the current phenomenon only represents a blip in comparison to the largeer temporal (the longue dureé) and spatial (the world system) scales usually deployed by world-ecology, we nonetheless discuss how the ideological, technical and power dynamics behind the issuance of green bonds unleash capital accumulation, produce a financialized and subordinated construction of nature, and entail an institutional arrangement.

 

The article is organized around 3 main sections. After the introduction, section 1 describes green bonds as one of the most fashionable financial topics of the moment, and one that promotes a shift in discourses towards the need of actively building a “green economy”. Although from a legal standpoint green bonds embody no significant difference from regular bonds, our focus is to describe the promises around them, the current (private) governance structure, and the trends in the issuance of these debt instruments both in the Global North and South, with a specific focus on the case of Brazil.

 

In section 2, we look at the operations of green bonds emissions on the ground, i.e. taking as an example the context of green debt underpinning the Brazilian forestry sector. The analysis reveals how the emissions, made predominantly by large multinational companies actively present on the global market, feed off great efforts deployed by both the public and the private sector in constructing an image of the sector as a key player in the emergent “bioeconomy” and in the strengthening of Brazil’s goals in the Paris Agreement. However, we describe how green bond revenues that are officially committed to the implementation of “sustainable management of forests” are associated with the expansion of the ecological frontier in the Brazilian territory, stretching the boundaries of the area dedicated to tree plantations and amplifying social and environmental tensions. The backstage of the emissions shows how capital accumulation through green bonds is associated with the co-production of nature for the purpose of accumulation, generating concerns that are often diluted or transformed into procedural requirements. Debt generated by the subscription of green bonds, we argue, is not only financial, but also social and ecological.

 

In section 3, we put forward that for private accumulation to be successful, green bonds in the forestry sector demand an institutional arrangement that combines state support and private governance of debt in its financial, social and ecological dimensions. Rather than being the result of an idealized and spontaneous market, a set of institutional transformations have to be considered in order to comprehend the feasibility of green bonds in the Brazilian forestry sector. We thus describe the historic connection between forestry and the state, the endless public incentives to put nature to work, the functional adaptations of the Brazilian environmental legislation and the regulation concerning the demarcation, access and use of land. In this context, we argue that green bonds add yet a new institutional layer to the process of creating and validating specific forms of nature, through a governance structure that dilutes the tensions between the promise of environmental benefits and its concrete negative social and environmental impacts.

 

We conclude the article by reassembling these findings as part of the capitalist world ecology “dialectical unity” of capital accumulation, co-production of nature and power. We suggest that the world-ecology approach allows us to grasp green bonds as a complex form that has so far been ignored in the relevant literature. As any other phenomenon of financialization, a green bond should not be understood in isolation from its material basis, since it is from that basis – and its social and environmental conditions and contradictions – that it appropriates value. As the example of the Brazilian forestry sector illuminates, the “greenness” of the financial debt inscribed in green bonds may come into existence at the expense of the social and environmental debt that underlie the forestry sector productive model.

 

Hence, although the explicit inclusion of “environmental concerns” into financial considerations and project implementation has been praised as a step towards the recognition that finance has a material impact on the planet and that these externalities shall be accounted for, the article warns of the typical green arithmetic move put forward by green bonds. Green bonds inevitably co-produce nature and social relations, but in a very unequal way that emphasizes capital accumulation and that does not necessarily protect the environment (even when standards are introduced). Much to the contrary, green bonds may come into being at the expense of other ways of living ecologically, and by restoring injustices of the past and creating a regenerative future - in other words, by creating debt.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Aglietta, M., Hourcade, J-C., Jaeger, C. y Fabert, B.P. (2015). Financing transition in an adverse context: climate finance beyond carbon finance. International environmental agreements: politics, law and economics, 15(4), 403-420. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10784-015-9298-1

Ahrens, S. y Oliveira, Y.M.M. (2017). Plantações florestais comerciais, a certificação e os diálogos setoriais. En Oliveira, Y.M.M. y Oliveira, E.B. (Eds.). Plantações Florestais: geração de benefícios com baixo impacto ambiental (pp. 73-78). Embrapa.

Alves da Silva, T.L. (2018). A apropriação capitalista da silvicultura no Brasil e sua lógica de produção do espaço. Terra Livre, 33(1), 159-199.

Antal, M. y Bergh, J. (2016). Green growth and climate change: conceptual and empirical considerations. Climate Policy, 16(2), 165-177. https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2014.992003

Barbosa, R.A. et al. (2019). Expansão da monocultura de eucalipto das indústrias de papel e celulose: uma arena de conflitos ambientais. Polêm!ca, 19(1), 69-90. https://doi.org/10.12957/polemica.2019.46671

Bigger, P. y Millington, N. (2020). Getting soaked? Climate crisis, adaptation finance, and racialized austerity. Nature and Space, 3(3), 601-623. https://doi.org/10.1177/2514848619876539

Borges, A. (2019). Finanças sustentáveis: a iniciativa privada assume a responsabilidade. Revista RI, 234, 10-18.

Bracking, S. (2019). Financialisation, climate finance, and the calculative challenges of managing environmental change. Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography, 51(3), 709-729. https://doi.org/10.1111/anti.12510

Celulose Irani. (2020). Relatório de sustentabilidade 2019. Recuperado de: http://www.irani.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Irani_Relatório-Sustentabilidade-2019-1.pdf (04.10.2020).

Climate Bonds Initiative. (2020a). Green Bonds global state of the market 2019. Recuperado de: https://www.climatebonds.net/system/tdf/reports/cbi_sotm_2019_vol1_04d.pdf?file=1&type=node&id=47577 (04.10.2020).

Climate Bonds Initiative. (2020b). Explaining green bonds. Recuperado de: https://www.climatebonds.net/market/explaining-green-bonds (04.10.2020).

Escobar, A. (1994). Encountering development-the making and unmaking of the Third World. Princeton University Press.

European Investment Bank (EIB). (2020). Climate awareness bonds. Recuperado de: https://www.eib.org/en/investor_relations/cab/index.htm (04.10.2020).

European Union Technical Expert Group on sustainable finance. (2020). Technical report: Taxonomy: Final report of the technical expert group on sustainable finance. Recuperado de: https://ec.europa.eu/info/sites/info/files/business_economy_euro/banking_and_finance/documents/200309-sustainable-finance-teg-final-report-taxonomy_en.pdf (04.10.2020).

Cerrato, D., y Ferrando, T. (2020). The Financialization of Civil Society Activism: Sustainable Finance, Non-Financial Disclosure and the Shrinking Space for Engagement. Accounting, Economics, and Law: A Convivium, 10(2). DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/ael-2019-0006.

Flammer, C. (2018). Corporate Green Bonds. Global Development Policy Center Working Paper, 023. Recuperado de: https://www.bu.edu/gdp/files/2018/11/GEGI-GDP.WP_.Corporate-Green-Bonds.pdf (04.10.2020).

Flammer, C. (2020). Green bonds: effectiveness and implications for public policy. Environmental and Energy Policy and the Economy, 1, 95-128. https://doi.org/10.1086/706794

Gibson-Graham, J.K. (2008). Diverse economies: performative practices for other worlds. Progress in Human Geography, 32(5), 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132508090821

Hazeu, M.T., Vecchione-Gonçalves, M. y Costa, S.M.G. (2020). Mobilidade do capital e estratégias de acumulação capitalista na Amazônia e no Cerrado Brasileiros. Revista de Politica Públicas da UFMA, 20, 433-455.

ICMA. Recuperado de: https://www.icmagroup.org. (04.10.2020).

Indústria Brasileira de Árvores. (2019). Relatório Anual 2019. Recuperado de: https://iba.org/datafiles/publicacoes/relatorios/relatorioiba2019-final.pdf (04.10.2020).

International Financial Corporation. (2020). Emerging Market Green Bonds Report 2019. Recuperado de: https://www.ifc.org/wps/wcm/connect/topics_ext_content/ifc_external_corporate_site/climate+business/resources/em-gb-report-2019 (04.10.2020).

International Financial Corporation y Climate Bonds Initiative. (2018). Creating Green Bond Markets-Insights, innovations, and tools from emerging markets. Recuperado de: https://www.ifc.org/wps/wcm/connect/topics_ext_content/ifc_external_corporate_site/sustainability-at-ifc/company-resources/sustainable-finance/SBN_GreenBond (04.10.2020).

Jessop, B. (2012). Economic and ecological crises, green new deals and no-growth economies. Developments, 55(1), 17-24. https://doi.org/10.1057/dev.2011.104

Jones, R., Baker, T., Huet, K., Murphy, L. y Lewis, N. (2020). Treating ecological deficit with debt: the practical and political concerns with green bonds. Geoforum, 114, 49-58. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2020.05.014

Klabin. (2020a). Relatório de Sustentabilidade. Recuperado de: https://rs.klabin.com.br (04.10.2020).

Klabin. (2020b). Apresentação Institutional 2T20. Recuperado de: https://s3.amazonaws.com/mz-filemanager/1c41fa99-efe7-4e72-81dd-5b571f5aa376/e901af62-326f-4da0-9635-6200f039f24b_klabin%20ap.%20institucional%202t20_port_compressed%20%281%29.pdf (04.10.2020).

Kro?ger, M. (2008). Finland, Brazil and State-Business Relations: The Case of Brazilian Pulp Investments. Trabajo presentado en la Brazil Today, Trans-Atlantically, Brazilian Studies Association Conference, Nueva Orleans.

Kro?ger, M. (2012). The Expansion of Industrial Tree Plantations and Dispossession in Brazil. Development and Change, 43(4), 947-973. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7660.2012.01787.x

Kröger, M. (2013). Globalization as the "Pulping" of Landscapes: Forestry Capitalism's North-South Territorial Accumulation. Globalizations, 10(6), 837-853. https://doi.org/10.1080/14747731.2013.814433

Kro?ger, M. (2014). The political economy of global tree plantation expansion: a review. Journal of Peasant Studies, 41(2), 235-261. https://doi.org/10.1080/03066150.2014.890596

Kröger, M. (2015). O papel do Estado brasileiro na criac?a?o de fronteira capitalista e novas naturezas no passado e futuro. En Santana, C.H. e Iglecias, W. (Eds.), Estado, burocracia e controle democra?tico (pp. 171-196). Alameda.

Kro?ger, M. (2016). The political economy of "flex trees": a preliminary analysis. The Journal of Peasant Studies. Disponible en: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03066150.2016.1140646. https://doi.org/10.1080/03066150.2016.1140646

KPMG. (2015). Gearing up for green bonds. Recuperado de: https://assets.kpmg/content/dam/kpmg/pdf/2015/03/gearing-up-for-green-bonds-v1.pdf (04.10.2020).

Kudavicz, M. y Almeida, R.A. (2014). Em tempos de "privatização" da reforma agrária, a necessária práxis do bem comum. Boletim DATALUTA.

Kuhlmann, W., Van der Mark, M. y Baffoni, S. (2019). Industrial Tree Plantations and Green Bonds. Environmental Paper Network. Recuperado de: https://environmentalpaper.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/EPN-2019-Industrial-tree-plantations-and-green-bonds.pdf (04.10.2020).

Ley 2646/2020, 14 de mayo de 2020. Proyecto de ley que regula las obligaciones de infraestructura. Cámara de Representantes. Recuperado de: camara.leg.br (04.10.2020).

MAPA. (2018). Plano Nacional de Desenvolvimento de Florestas Plantadas. Recuperado de: https://www.gov.br/agricultura/pt-br/assuntos/politica-agricola/outras-publicacoes/plano-nacional-de-desenvolvimento-de-florestas-plantadas.pdf/view (04.10.2020).

Marks, S. (2011). Human rights and root causes. The Modern Law Review, 74(1), 57-78. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2230.2010.00836.x

Marques, M.I.M. (2016). A territorialização da empresa Suzano no campo em são Paulo e no Maranhão. Revista GeoNordeste, 27(2), 213-227.

Moore, J.W. (2003). Capitalism as world-ecology: Braudel and Marx on environmental history. Organization & Environment, 16(4), 431-458. https://doi.org/10.1177/1086026603259091

Moore, J.W. (2011). Wall Street is a Way of Organizing Nature An interview with Jason Moore. Upping the Anti: A Journal of Theory and Action, 12, 39-54.

Moore, J.W. (2014a). The End of Cheap Nature. Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying about "The" Environment and Love the Crisis of Capitalism. En Suter, C. y Chase-Dunn, C. (Ed.). Structures of the World Political Economy and the Future of Global Conflict and Cooperation (pp. 285-314). LIT. Traducido al español como: Moore, J.W. (2016). El fin de la naturaleza barata: O cómo aprendí a dejar de preocuparme por "el" medioambiente y amar la crisis del capitalismo. Relaciones Internacionales, 33, 143-74. Traducido por Nicolás Pozo.

Moore, J.W. (2014b). Toward a singular metabolism: epistemic rifts and environment-making in the capitalist world-ecology. New Geographies, 6, 10-19.

Moore, J.W. (2015a). Capitalism in the web of life. Verso.

Moore, J.W. (2015b). Cheap food and bad climate: From Surplus Value to Negative Value in the Capitalist World-Ecology. Critical Historical Studies, 2(1), 1-43. https://doi.org/10.1086/681007

OECD. (2017). Mobilizing bond markets for a low-carbon transition. Recuperado de: https://www.oecd.org/env/mobilising-bond-markets-for-a-low-carbon-transition-9789264272323-en.htm (04.10.2020). https://doi.org/10.1787/9789264272323-en

Oliveira, A.B., Pereira, J.M. y Nascimento, A.A. (2018). Cadeia produtiva de papel e celulose e transformações recentes no sudoeste maranhense. Revista de Geografia e Interdisciplinaridade, 4(12), 135-154. https://doi.org/10.18764/2446-6549.v4n12p135-154

Pantoja, V.M. L. y Pereira, J.M. (2016). Grandes projetos e populações tradicionais na Amazônia: a Suzano Papel e Celulose no Maranhão. Revista Política & Trabalho, 45, 327-340.

Paranque, B. y Revelli, C. (2019). Ethico-economic analysis of impact finance: the case of Green Bonds. Research in International Business and Finance, 47, 57-66. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ribaf.2017.12.003

Parenti, C. (2016). Environment-making in the Capitalocene: Political Ecology of the State. En Moore, J.W. (Ed.). Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Nature, history, and the crisis of capitalism (pp. 166-184). PM Press.

Park, S.K. (2018). Investors as regulators: green bonds and the governance challenges of the sustainable finance revolution. Stanford Journal of International Law, 54, 1-47.

Perez, O. (2008). The new universe of green finance: from self-regulation to multi-polar governance. En Dilling, O., Herberg, M. y Winter, G. (Eds.). Responsible Business: Self-Governance and Law in Transnational Economic Transactions (pp. 151-80). Hart Publishing.

Perez, O. (2016). The green economy paradox: a critical inquiry into sustainability indexes. Minnesota Journal of Law, Science and Technology, 17(1), 153-220.

Perpetua, G.M., Kröger, M. y Thomaz Junior, A. (2017). Estratégias de territorizalição das corporações agroextrativistas na América Latina: o caso da indústria de celulose no Brasil. Revista NERA, 20(40), 61-87. https://doi.org/10.47946/rnera.v0i40.5357

Polanyi, K. (1944). The great transformation. Farrar and Rinehart.

Prol, F., Junqueira, G.O., Marques, M. y Ferrando, T. (2020). Finanzas verdes y hundimiento de la regulación ambiental al servicio de la extrema derecha em Brasil. Ecología Política, 59, 57-67.

Reyes, O. (2020). Change finance, not the climate. Transnational Institute (TNI) and the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), Amsterdam y Washington. Recuperado de: https://www.tni.org/files/publication-downloads/change_finance_not_the_climate_online_def.pdf (04.10.2020).

Sachs, J., Woo, W.T., Yoshino, N. y Taghizadeh-Hesary, F. (2019). Importance of green finance for achieving sustainable development goals and energy security. En Sachs, J., Woo, W.T., Yoshino, N. y Taghizadeh-Hesary, F. (Eds.) Handbook of Green Finance (pp. 3-12). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-0227-5_13

Shishlov, I., Nicol, M. y Cochram, I. (2018). Environmental integrity of green bonds: stakes, status and next steps. Green Bonds Research Program Work Package 2. Climate Works Foundation. Recuperado de: https://www.i4ce.org/download/environmental-integrity-of-green-bonds/ (04.10.2020).

Silva, M.O. y Almeida, R.A. (2014). Esgotamento da política pública de reforma agrária? Revista Eletrônica da Associação dos Geógrafos Brasileiros Seção Três Lagoas, 11(20), 60-84.

Silva Neta, M.Q. (2018). Sou uma mulher praticamente livre. Almeida, A.W.B. (Ed.). Casa 8.

Siswantoro, D. (2018). The relationship of the green bond and the Social Development Goals (SDGs) targets: a case study of Vigeo Eiris. E3S Web of Conferences 74, 1003. https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20187401003

Sitawi. (2019). Parecer Independente: Debênture Verde da Celulose Irani. Recuperado de: https://spositawi.s3-sa-east-1.amazonaws.com/20190719+Celulose+Irani.pdf (04.10.2020).

Sitawi. (2020). Operações brasileiras sustentáveis de crédito. Recuperado de: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/u/1/d/e/2PACX-1vRDp7Z82Qovj9VuupGGQGSiBi66hQPdRL5ucb6kZ80HyjtQtVjjtf7Qekh99_DVs2FRG-8ADHE05ASP/pubhtml (04.10.2020).

Suzano. 2020. Relatório de Sustentabilidade 2019. Recuperado de: https://storage.googleapis.com/stateless-site-suzano-com-br/2020/05/c133f4c6-rasuzano2019.pdf (04.10.2020).

Sustainalytics. (2016a). Suzano Papel e Celulose S.A. Green Bond: Framework Overview and Second Opinion. Recuperado de: https://www.icmagroup.org/Emails/icma-vcards/Suzano_External%20Review%20Report.pdf (05.07.2020).

Sustainalytics. (2016b). Fibria Green Bond: Framework Overview and Second Opinion. Recuperado de: https://www.sustainalytics.com/sites/default/files/green_bond_framework_and_opinion_fibria.pdf (05.07.2020).

Sustainalytics. (2017). Klabin Green Bond: Framework Overview and Second Opinion. Recuperado de: https://www.sustainalytics.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Klabin-Green-Bond-Framework-and-Opinion-08302017_FINAL.pdf (05.07.2020).

The Forest Company. Operations. Recuperado de: http://www.theforestcompany.se/our-operations (04.10.2020).

Toledo, M.H.S. (2012). O impacto da plantação extensiva de eucalipto nas culturas tradicionais. Cadernos IHUideias, 10 (167).

Vecchione-Gonçalves, M. (2018). Acumulação por Legislação: Código Florestal e Cadastro Ambiental Rural como zoneamento da expansão do agronegócio e da apropriação de terras nos Cerrados. Revista Cerrados: CPT, 44-55.

Voivodic, M.A. y Beduschi Filho, L.C. (2011) Os desafios de legitimidade em sistemas multissetoriais de governança: uma análise do Forest Stewardship Council. Ambiente & Sociedade, 14(1), 115-132. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1414-753X2011000100007

Wacquant, L.J.D. (1985). Heuristic Models in Marxian Theory. Social Forces, 64(1), 17-45. https://doi.org/10.2307/2578970

Weber, O. y Saravade, V. (2019). Green bonds: current development and their future. Center for International Governance Information Papers, 210. Recuperado de: https://www.cigionline.org/publications/green-bonds-current-development-and-their-future (04.10.2020).

World Bank. (2017). Green Bonds. Recuperado de: http://pubdocs.worldbank.org/en/554231525378003380/publicationpensionfundservicegreenbonds201712-rev.pdf (04.10.2020).

WRM, 2013. FSC consultation and complaints procedures: the case of Veracel Celulose in Brazil. Recuperado de: https://wrm.org.uy/books-and-briefings/new-briefing-on-fsc-certification-of-plantations/ (04.10.2020).

Zhang, D., Zhang, Z. y Managi, S. (2019). A bibliometric analysis on green finance: current status, development and future directions. Finance Research Letters 29, 425-430. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.frl.2019.02.003