TY  - JOUR
SP  - 747
UR  - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-024-01346-2
TI  - Large-scale green grabbing for wind and solar photovoltaic development in Brazil
KW  - Energy policy
KW  -  Political economy of energy
N1  - This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher?s terms and conditions.
SN  - 2398-9629
ID  - discovery10192897
AV  - public
EP  - 757
JF  - Nature Sustainability
N2  - Large-scale wind and solar photovoltaic infrastructures are rapidly expanding in Brazil. These low-carbon technologies can exacerbate land struggles rooted in historical inequities in landownership, lack of regulation and weak governance. Here we trace how green grabbing?that is, the large-scale appropriation and control of (undesignated) public lands, both formally legal and illicit, for the development of wind and solar photovoltaic power?has developed in Brazil from 2000 to 2021. We find that global investors and owners, mainly from Europe, are involved in 78% of wind and 96% of solar photovoltaic parks, occupying 2,148?km2 and 102?km2 of land, respectively. We also show that land privatization is the prevalent land tenure regime for securing land, indicating substantial transformations of prior (undesignated) public and common lands. We conclude that green grabbing is a persistent, critical phenomenon in Brazil, requiring transparency and vigilant monitoring of land claims and tenure modifications.
VL  - 7
Y1  - 2024/06//
A1  - Klingler, Michael
A1  - Ameli, Nadia
A1  - Rickman, Jamie
A1  - Schmidt, Johannes
PB  - Springer Science and Business Media LLC
ER  -