Tag Archive for: Andrea Bogosian

Instituto Escolhas and the carbon market

Instituto Escolhas identifies the economic, social and environmental costs of public and private projects by through research, studies and analyses on topics such as energy, oceans, forests and urbanization.”

The Instituto Escolhas is a nonprofit civil organization and presents the economic, social, and environmental impacts of public and private decisions on the concept of sustainability.

The association produces studies, analyses, and reports to support new approaches and arguments, enabling solutions to make sustainable development feasible.

“Only qualified arguments can overcome controversial ‘trade-offs’ in the economy and consolidate decisions regarding difficult choices, thus enabling the building of effective solutions for sustainable development.”

Values of Instituto Escolhas

The Institute’s values include boldness, consistency, and independence.

“Boldness. Usage of mathematical language to measure and compare the degree of sustainability of public and private policies, creating innovative scenarios integrated by information cross-checking. Consistency. Developing the capacity to process multiple data with methodological rigor, producing solid arguments, systematic statistics, and comparative charts to help in analyses and conscious choices. Independence. Working through networks with autonomous research, open to diverse perspectives and plural viewpoints, overcoming prejudices and explaining facts and numbers with independence from any ideology.”

The carbon market

The retention and capture by forests of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere contribute to climate regulation and climate change mitigation – these are the only services with economic valuation mechanisms in consolidated markets.

Discussions about the regulation of carbon markets are part of the Conferences of the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change since 1997.

Since then, certification methodologies and carbon credit transaction mechanisms have evolved, but the political consensus necessary to create a global market has not yet been reached.

While a regulated market is not established as a global mechanism, linked to the Nationally Determined Contributions, for mitigating and reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, carbon markets regulated at the regional (such as the European Union), national (such as China), or subnational levels (like that of California) are being consolidated. In addition, a voluntary market has also emerged, in which companies, individuals, social organizations, and governments can voluntarily generate or buy carbon credits through projects that remove, prevent, or reduce GHG emissions into the atmosphere.

The Forest is ours. Carbon credits and forest concessions

Instituto Escolhas calculated the potential for generating and trading carbon credits produced by REDD+ (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation) and reforestation projects in Brazilian forest concessions.

“Although Brazil has the largest tropical forest in the world, the country is still lagging behind others like Colombia and Peru in terms of voluntary generation of credits based on forest carbon offsets, with 20 certified REDD+ projects underway and only two of them in public forests (Verra, 2021). The generation of carbon credits in forest concessions can be a pathway to change this scenario.”

The association supported the elaboration of Bill No. 5.518/2020 to foster concessions and diversify sustainable activities. The innovation enables the generation of credits resulting from avoided carbon emissions due to the conservation of natural forests, the so-called REDD+ credits.

Trading carbon credits

The Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) is the main certification standard for the voluntary carbon credit market, which registers and monitors projects that reduce or remove GHG emissions across different sectors. The purpose of certification is to trace credits from their origin to their expiration, guaranteeing the credit’s environmental integrity by ensuring that it is linked to a project that effectively reduced emissions.

“When a registered project proves that it has been able to reduce or remove an amount equivalent to a metric ton of CO2 from the atmosphere, it attains the right to issue a carbon credit.

These credits are purchased by institutions that wish to mitigate their GHG emissions, a practice that is becoming increasingly widespread. A growing number of companies are making commitments to achieve carbon neutrality – the so-called Net Zero – by buying credits to compensate the emissions generated by their operations (Viri, 2021).”

Fashion Label Brasil

The associate Andrea Bogosian created the initiative to balance out the impact of carbon emissions from the brand’s processes and activities through carbon credits of the Moss digital platform.

“In 2020, we committed to becoming a Carbon Friendly company, and by the end of the year, we will have a CO2 offset equivalent to a preserved forest area.”

“Compensation comes from projects that share our values. In partnership with Moss, the company has favored the conservation of the Amazon Forest with the creation of the Fortaleza Ituxi Project, located in one of the most threatened areas of the forest – in the municipality of Lábrea”. “We believe in uniting fashion with awareness and purpose.” Learn more …

“The unique designs, the plurality and the varied cultures mean the creations are unique. Discover the best of the country’s trends and innovations.”

Apex-Brasil (Brazilian Trade and Investment Promotion Agency),  ABEST (Brazilian Association of Fashion Designers), Abit (Brazilian Textile and Apparel Industry Association), and Abicalçados  (Brazilian footwear Industries Association) promoted Brasil Fashion Now to position Brazilian fashion brands in the international market.

“BFN is a democratic project, an excellent opportunity for brands. For those who have never had any experience with the international market, it offers an enormous learning experience about what it means to take the step towards internationalization, from several important perspectives – such as, for example, seasonality, brand building, collection, price composition, and vocabulary. Even the participation in physical events does not provide this kind of understanding. For brands that already have some type of distribution, the project is an opportunity to be in a channel that serves all the needs for continuity and expansion of your business in a consistent way, cutting steps along the way, reducing costs, and improving processes. With the continuity of the project, now in its third edition, we can see the realization of these relationships that have been cultivated, boosting Brazilian brands around the world”, Manoela Amaro, CEO and Co-Founder of BLANC.

Originality, Plurality, Varied Cultures

Brasil Fashion Now explores all of the originality, trends, and innovation of Brazilian fashion through the international B2B BLANC Fashion platform. Also, the second edition of the event (BFN2), from March to September 2021, presented Brazilian brands: Akra Collection, Andrea Bogosian, Andreza Chagas, Augusta, Catarina Mina, Haight, Inti Brand, Lily Franco, Maneca, Meerk, Osklen, Roberta Mattos, Room, Sy&Vie, Wee (Fashion Label Brasil); TIG and Belier Belier.

BLANC Platform

“BLANC is a powerful sales tool used by prominent brands around the world. It supports online businesses by helping them expand their sales to global markets, offering a wholesale management solution. BLANC proposes an innovative way to shape companies for digital wholesale.”

​​The platforms offers an intuitive interface to support strategic decisions and is a way to showcase creativity in a structured and professional manner to retailers around the world.

Digital Promotion and Exhibition for the International Market

Brazilian brands promoted results in the total amount of USD 94,669.00 and USD 444,000.00 for future expectations.

“The project focuses on the digital dissemination of Brazilian brands in the international market, in addition to strengthening their performance and sales through a customized commercial reach.”

About ABEST

The Brazilian Association of Fashion Designers, created in 2003, aims to strengthen and promote Brazilian design and fashion. Its main purpose is to help the development of Brazilian brands with international reach and guarantee their authenticity and creativity, in addition to promoting the Brazilian lifestyle, thus contributing to the growth of all segments linked to fashion. Currently, ABEST, which is a non-profit, has 120 brands from all over Brazil that export products to 57 different countries. Also, it constantly carries out strategic actions to expand its penetration in new markets around the world and strengthen relations with those that are already established.

About Fashion Label Brasil

Fashion Label Brasil, a Fashion Internationalization Program of Added Value, was created in 2003 by ABEST in partnership with Apex-Brasil, whose proposal is to position the image of Brazilian fashion abroad, enhancing the image of an innovative and contemporary Brazil. The program has strategic activities – Buyer and Image Project, International Fairs and Fashion Shows, Showroom Project, in addition to special activations – to expand penetration in new markets and strengthen relations with those that are already established.

About Apex-Brasil

The Brazilian Trade and Investment Promotion Agency (Apex-Brasil) works to promote Brazilian products and services abroad and attract foreign investment to strategic sectors of the Brazilian economy. To achieve these goals, Apex-Brasil carries out diversified trade promotion actions aimed at promoting exports and valuing Brazilian products and services abroad, such as commercial prospective missions, business roundtables, support for the participation of Brazilian companies in major international fairs, visits by foreign buyers and opinion setters to get to know the Brazilian productive structure, among other business platforms that also aim to strengthen the country’s brand.

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