This week, Brazil’s National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES) launched another permanent call for the BNDES Azul (“Blue BNDES”) program, named after the color of the ocean. This time, efforts aim to preserve coral reefs with a minimum BRL 60 million. A previous branch of the program, unveiled in 2023, was aimed at protecting mangroves, a public call for BRL 50 million involving eight mangrove areas along the coast.
In practice, the coral preservation initiative means that the bank will invest BRL 30 million in coral monitoring, preservation, and repair projects, and make BRL 30 million available for plans to be sponsored by foundations linked to private companies, international organizations, and state governments.
While announcing the call, BNDES President Aloizio Mercadante stressed the importance of the ecosystem for the environment and the economy, including tourism.
“Corals are like a condominium of marine life. One in four life forms in the oceans at some point goes through corals, and they are being heavily assaulted and threatened. We need to react to this,” he declared.
The bank presented data on the economic effects of preserving coral reefs. According to the study Oceano sem Mistérios (Ocean without Mysteries), carried out by the Grupo Boticário Foundation, for every square kilometer of reef preserved, some BRL 940 million is saved in investment to protect the coast and BRL 62 million is generated in tourism. In Brazil, this represents BRL 7 billion from coral tourism.
Coral bleaching
Corals are marine invertebrates capable of feeding themselves. But a large part of their diet is obtained through symbiosis—a mutually beneficial relationship—with algae. Grouped together, coral species form…