President Lula's Speech At The Closing Session Of The G20 Summit And Handover Of The Presidency To South Africa
Today, Brazil completes the penultimate stage of a four-year sequence in which developing countries have occupied the leadership of the G20.
Indonesia, India, Brazil, and, now, South Africa bring to the table perspectives that are of interest to the vast majority of the world's population.
Starting in Bali, passing through New Delhi, and arriving in Rio de Janeiro, we strive to promote measures that have a concrete impact on people's lives.
We launched a Global Alliance against Hunger and Poverty and began an unprecedented debate on taxing the super-rich.
We put climate change on the agendas of Finance Ministries and central banks and approved the first multilateral document on the bioeconomy.
We issued a Call to Action for reforms that make global governance more effective and representative, and we engage in dialogue with society through the G20 Social.
We launched a roadmap to make multilateral development banks better, bigger, and more effective and gave African countries a voice in the debt debate.
We established the Women’s Empowerment Working Group and proposed an eighteenth Sustainable Development Goal to promote racial equality.
We defined key trade and sustainable development principles and committed to tripling global renewable energy capacity by 2030.
We created a Coalition for Local and Regional Production of Vaccines and Medicines and decided to expand financing for water and sanitation infrastructure.
We welcome events from the World Health Organization's Investment Round, believing that more resources are needed to collectively respond to new and persistent health challenges.
We approved a Strategy to Promote Cooperation in Open Innovation and address asymmetries in scientific and technological production. We also decided to establish a task force on the governance of artificial intelligence at the G20.
This year, we held more than 140 meetings across 15 Brazilian cities.
We once again adopted consensus statements in almost all working groups.
We left a lesson: that the greater the interaction between the Sherpa and Finance tracks, the greater and more significant the results of our work will be.
We worked hard, even though we knew we had only scratched the surface of the world's profound challenges.
After the South African presidency, all G20 countries will have exercised group leadership at least once.
This will be an opportune moment to evaluate the role we have played so far and how we should act from now on.
We have a responsibility to do better.
It is with this hope that I pass the gavel of the G20 presidency to President Ramaphosa.
This is not an ordinary handover of the presidency — it is the concrete expression of the historical, economic, social, and cultural ties that unite Latin America and Africa.
I would like to thank everyone who contributed to the Brazilian presidency, especially those who worked to make our achievements possible.
I wish our comrade Ramaphosa every success in leading the G20. South Africa can count on Brazil to exercise a presidency surpassing our achievements.
I remember the words of another great South African, Nelson Mandela, who said: it is easy to demolish and destroy; the heroes are those who build.
Let us continue building a just world and a sustainable planet.
Thank you very much.