Eyewitness

COP30: The Amazonians who don't care who Trump is - and their fight to protect home

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Out of the window is Brazil's cattle country.

Huge Texan-style ranches are interspersed with ugly towns that grew up around Brazil's westward expansion of the 1970s and 80s.

It's almost impossible to imagine that when I was a child, all this was an impenetrable rainforest.

Now only fragments remain. And a warming climate is helping take what's left.

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The fight to save the Amazon

Along the road, we see fires. Despite vegetation appearing green and lush, they're burning intensely.

Rainfall in this region is less than it was and dry season temperatures are around two degrees higher.

When fires start - and there were around 140,000 of them last year, nearly all man-made - they burn for longer and more destructively.

Despite significant reductions in deforestation by Brazilian President Lula da Silva's government, fires in 2024 claimed millions of hectares, diminishing the progress.

Earth's lungs are collapsing - is net zero dead?
Earth's lungs are collapsing - is net zero dead?

Is it too late to save the climate? Paste BN travels across the globe to find out

And once the forest has burned, it typically loses its legal protection - and the cattle move in.

How can rainforests - one of the most important land-based stores of planet-warming carbon - stand up to pressure from climate and people?

Perhaps by having people in them, like the Kayapo.

They are one of Brazil's 300-odd indigenous groups and have been one of the most successful in protecting their ancestral territory.

No mean feat considering that the territory is the same size as Portugal and there are little more than 9,000 Kayapo.

In the past, they killed invaders and violently resisted early efforts by the Brazilian government to claim their land.

The village we arrive in is called Kubenkrankehn. It translates, ironically for me, as "bald white man" - an early missionary who came to convert the Kayapo here centuries ago. He didn't last long.

The greeting we receive is the opposite, singing and dancing by villagers wearing feathered headdresses and hand-sewn beads - a display of tradition and unity that's been attributed to their success.

But also, one for our cameras.

Kayapo territory in the Amazon
Image: Kayapo territory in the Amazon

The Kayapos' fight now is for recognition and financial support to protect their land as ranches, roads and illegal gold mines continue to eat away at the forest bordering their territory.

After being taken to a guard post, we travel on to see what they're defending.

And nothing has prepared me for how overwhelmingly beautiful it is.

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A land of waterfalls, towering trees and every inch of it roiling with life.

Here, the buzzing, pinging and metallic ringing isn't from mobile phones, just millions of creatures that sound like them.

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An elder tells us how even this healthiest of forests has changed in response to warmer temperatures and declining rainfall.

He tells me the leaders who don't believe in climate change can only do so because they live in comfortable cities.

So what, I ask, does he make of Donald Trump?

He tells me he's never heard of him.

The Kayapo are sending delegates to COP30, just as they have done for years.

Not because they're that interested in the politics of climate change or the gathering pace of a low-carbon transition.

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Where developed world leaders see a challenge, they see an opportunity.

The Kayapo territory
Image: The Kayapo territory

Rainforest is one of the most powerful storage systems for greenhouse gases. Sucking up the carbon we burn and turning it into life.

With two, or more, degrees of global warming all but certain, keeping forests like theirs standing is one of our few insurance policies against a dangerously hotter future.