Between 2006 and 2013 the number of visits to federal protected areas, mostly to national parks, tripled to 6.3 million. In 2007 the
Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation (ICMBio) was created to manage federal conservation units, including national parks, taking over from the
Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA). More funds were made available for settling expropriation claims, and a system of environmental compensation was introduced to support investment in parks. The result has been growth in the number of parks with management plans and clear land ownership. These may qualify for outsourced public use services. Private concessions have been used in parks such as
Tijuca and
Fernando de Noronha, and more are planned. Of the 67 national parks in 2010, 19 protected an area that represents 5% of the original
Amazon rainforest, and another 22 protected 1% of the original
Atlantic Forest. Seven parks protected the
Caatinga ecoregion and twelve the
Cerrado ecoregion. There were only six coastal and marine parks, including one that protected the
Pantanal wetland. No park protected the
Pampas. Most protected areas created in the 2000s had the primary goal of reducing deforestation, and little effort has been made to promote public use. A 2012 survey showed that only 44% of Brazilians knew what a protected area was, and only 1% of those knew their purpose was to promote tourism and recreation. , now a restaurant in the
Tijuca Forest park, Rio de Janeiro The parks vary greatly in size between the Tijuca Forest in
Rio de Janeiro and the
Tumucumaque Mountains National Park in the Amazon. By 2010 only 30 parks were accessible to the public. Of these, the two most visited were the Tijuca with 1.7 million visitors and the
Iguaçu with 1 million visitors, together accounting for 71% of all visits to national parks in Brazil in 2009. In 2011 it was estimated that the potential revenue from Brazil's national parks could be around R$1.7 billion annually by 2016. In 2012 ICMBio earned R$24 million from entrance fees and services, mostly from just four parks. As of 2012 there were 68 national parks but only 26 were officially open to visitors. Some of the others received visitors informally.
Chapada dos Veadeiros National Park illustrates the problem. It is a
World Heritage Site and has unique
cerrado vegetation and hundreds of waterfalls and other bodies of water. Just 22,950 tourists visited the park in 2009. There is only one park entrance, and very limited tourist infrastructure. ICMBio does not charge an entrance fee, and is unable to sell food, drinks and souvenirs. Bureaucratic problems have delayed opening these services to private enterprise. == Map ==