Shouldn't this be moved to
Skate of the Nations?
Anyway...
Speaking of Brazil, most of our accomplishments in this sport have been brought by first-gen Americans/Europeans with Brazilian citizenship, but once in a while a kid who was born here gets their chance, although very rarely as our biggest ice rink's size is a quarter of the official one. CBDG/Ice Brasil is the Brazilian Ice Sports Federation. There's an
annual national figure skating championship hosted in Brazil for singles only.
Here's last season's nationals so you have an idea on how our current local conditions are:
Currently, in seniors, we only have one ice dance team,
Natalia Pallu-Neves and Jayin Panesar. Natalia is the one with Brazilian citizenship here, her whole family is Brazilian but her parents immigrated to England and she was born in London. They actually represented GBR for some time in juniors before moving to CBDG after a feud with BIS due to not getting enough chances to compete or something. They're currently coached by Coomes and Buckland and were the first Brazilian team to compete at 4CC. They haven't managed to compete at Worlds yet.
We used to be a proper country and have a junior ice dance team too, but they've ended their partnership and currently
Catharina Guedes Tibau is looking for a new partner to get back to the JGP circuit. She was born in Salvador, Brazil and moved to Canada with her family as a kid. Last season, she competed in Junior Worlds with her former partner. She's now in IAM Ontario being coached by Moir, Diaz and Hubbell. It's tough being a girl in junior ice dance, one'd think having unlimited access to international competition and good coaches would attract some candidates, but small fed politics are inexistent... Here's hoping she finds a partner soon!
In singles, we currently have two girls competing in juniors internationally and possibly a boy next season.
Elena Mills is the child of a Brazilian mother who was born in the US and thus holds double citizenship. She started to represent Brazil last year and is the typical case of an athlete who would never make it to the US nationals and so decided to look for a less crowded fed. She has some good spins though, and nice music choices. She's got a similar tech content to our current national champion, Maria, but she's always had better training conditions, so her ceiling currently seems a bit lower. However she might still be a late bloomer like Isadora Williams, another American-born Brazilian who was famously the first Latin American to make it to the free skating at the Olympics (although you could argue that Donovan was the first Latin American born and raised skater... Citizenship is complicated, y'all). Elena has never competed in Brazil, btw, I wonder where she'd place in nationals.
Maria Reikdal was born and raised in Brazil and doubles as an inline artistic skater since there are no permanent rinks nearby. She's actually the
current world junior champion in artistic inline skating, although her tech difficulty is much lower than what you'd see in a junior figure skating champion. Still, she's undisputably the best female figure skater, junior or senior, who currently trains in Brazil, thus the only one competing internationally. I personally think she's got a lot of potential but she needs proper training conditions and a better coach (she's coached by her parents who have no figure skating experience) in order to improve. She has landed 3S, 3T (in competition) and 3F (in training) on both inline and figure skates and 3Lo in training in figure skates. Her 2A is actually really decent.
Lucaz Filipe was also born and raised in Brazil and is our up and coming male junior figure skater and I think he might finally get his shot at competing internationally at the JGP next season as he has been working on cleaning his triples this summer at the US. He's got some potential too and I hope he's able to keep upgrading his tech content as he grows up and gets to train abroad more often (his family seems to be financially able to send him there once in a while - again, not ideal but...). I actually wish he and Maria could become the first Brazilian pairs team as she's so tiny and he's so tall

(and they've trained SBS triples together on occasion, Maria specially has played with pair elements before) but it's impossible to seriously train pairs elements in Brazilian rinks so it's a distant dream as of now... Both of them would probably have a better chance of success as a team than on singles, but things aren't that simple, of course. Still, one can dream for more trailblazers in this country where summer is all year long
You can check the
Brazilian figure skaters Wikipedia category for more info on former skaters, it's very well kept
