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The Climate Litigation Database

Federal Public Prosecutor’s Office v. Clair Cunha da Silva (Deforestation and climate damage in the PAE Antimary)

Geography
Year
2021
Document Type
Litigation

About this case

Filing year
2021
Status
Pending
Court/admin entity
BrazilAmazonasAmazonas Federal Court
Case category
Suits against corporations, individuals (Global)Others (Global)
Principal law
BrazilFederal Constitution of 1988BrazilForest Code (Law No. 12.651 of 2012)BrazilILO Convention 169 concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples (enacted by Decree No. 5.051 of 2004, later revoked by Decree No. 10.088 of 2019)BrazilNational Environmental Policy Act (Law No. 6.938 of 1981)BrazilNational Policy on Climate Change – PNMC (Federal Law No. 12.187 of 2009)BrazilParis Agreement (enacted by Federal Decree No. 9.073 of 2017)BrazilUN Framework Convention on Climate Change - UNFCCC (enacted by Federal Decree 2652/1998)International LawUNFCCCParis Agreement
At issue
Whether a Brazilian farmer is responsible for climate and environmental damages stemming from deforestation in the Amazon.
Topics
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Documents

Summary

On June 29, 2021, the Federal Public Prosecutor's Office (MPF) filed a Civil Public Action (CPA) against Clair Cunha da Silva for deforesting an area of 370.97 hectares between 2011 and 2020 in Boca do Acre, Amazonas. The MPF alleges that the defendant’s occupation of the land was illegal, as it was part of an Agro-Extractivist Settlement Project (PAE) owned and managed by the National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform (INCRA) and occupied by traditional extractivist communities. This CPA is one of 22 lawsuits filed by the MPF as a result of an investigation conducted under Civil Inquiry No. 1.13.000.001719/2015-49 into illegal deforestation within the Antimary Agro-Extractivist Settlement Project (PAE), though each case involves different defendants. The lawsuit is based, among other things, on Brazilian environmental law concerning the constitutional protection of the environment, allegations of deforestation, propter rem civil liability for environmental damage (including climate damage), and collective moral damages. It also references the unauthorized emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG) caused by the illegal deforestation, calculated at 215,909.79 tons of carbon dioxide, which directly contribute to Brazil’s deviation from its climate goals—placing it out of step with both national and international commitments established under the National Policy on Climate Change (PNMC) (Federal Law 12.187/2009) and the Paris Agreement (promulgated by Federal Decree 9.073/2017). Among other requests, the lawsuit seeks: (i) reparation for the damage caused by illegal deforestation; (ii) payment of compensation for intermediate and residual material environmental damage; (iii) payment of compensation for climate damage; and (iv) payment of compensation for collective moral damages. On February 14, 2022, Clair Cunha da Silva filed an answer, arguing that she had never held possession or ownership of the area, as she had been living in another state for more than 50 years. She contended that the responsibility for preserving, protecting, monitoring, and preventing invasions and exploitation of the area lies with public officials. She requested that the case be dismissed in its entirety.

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Group
Topics
Target
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience
Finance