(Updates with comments from Silva news conference)
By Anthony Boadle
BRASILIA, Aug 20 (Reuters) - Environmentalist Marina Silva officially launched a bid for president on Wednesday, upending Brazil's October elections and threatening the ruling Workers' Party's 12-year hold on power.
Silva, until now a vice-presidential candidate for the Brazilian Socialist Party, accepted its nomination to top the ticket after candidate Eduardo Campos, a former governor and rising political star, was killed in a plane crash last week.
Silva pledged to build a more prosperous Brazil and slammed the performance of incumbent President Dilma Rousseff, who has overseen four years of lackluster growth and high inflation in a previously booming economy.
"We know that our country needs investments and they will come when there is a new government that has credibility among investors," she said at a news conference.
Silva reaffirmed her commitment to fiscal responsibility, inflation targeting and a floating exchange rate, the so-called "tripod" of economic policies that gave Brazil stability after a period of rampant inflation and erratic growth in the 1990s.
Viewed as an outsider with no links to traditional elites, Silva is a former environment minister whose ironclad environmental and religious beliefs prompt critics to call her inflexible but supporters to praise her as Brazil's most principled politician.
Silva, a rubber tapper in her youth who was illiterate until adolescence, appeals mostly to young voters disgusted with Brazil's political establishment.
But she is also embraced by Brazil's large evangelical Christian community and has proven, in a 2010 bid for the presidency with the Green Party, to be an attractive candidate for independent voters seeking an alternative to the Workers' Party and its main opposition, the business-friendly Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB).
An opinion poll on Monday showed Silva, who has vowed to find common ground between her activist ideals and investor-friendly economic policies, tied in second place with the PSDB's Aecio Neves for the Oct. 5 election. The vote is expected to go to a runoff in which Silva, if she finishes ahead of Neves, enjoys growing odds of defeating Rousseff.
On Tuesday, a PSDB source told Reuters the party, to ensure Rousseff is unseated, would back Silva in a runoff if Neves failed to make it.
Still, Silva's prospects could fade when the emotional impact of Campos's death subsides and the two much-bigger parties begin heavy campaign spending.
AMAZON RAINFOREST
Silva, a 56-year-old pioneer of Brazil's environmental movement, entered politics to fight for Amazon conservation. Once a member of the Workers' Party, which embraced environmental causes before assuming a developmentalist tack once it came into power, Silva served as environment minister during the administration of former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Rousseff's predecessor.