Position
of the U.S. and China for COP-15 “frustrates”
brazilian minister
17/11/2009
- The Brazilian minister of the Environment, Carlos Minc,
said yesterday (November 16) he was "frustrated"
with the position of the United States and China of not
taking numerical commitments to reduce emissions in the
United Nations Convention on Climate Change (COP-15), which
happens in December in Copenhagen. Minc said that Brazil
is already trying to make these countries change their position,
for COP-15 not to fail.
During
the meeting of the Economic and Social Development Council,
Minc said that without the participation of the two countries,
which are responsible for half of global emissions, an agreement
regarding climate change won't be possible.
The
Brazilian government presented on Friday (November 13),
in São Paulo, the commitment to reduce from 36.1%
to 39% estimates of emissions for 2020. The proposal will
be presented at COP-15. Minc told members of the Council
that Brazil has done its part and has a strong commitment
to implement mitigation actions by 2020.
+
More
Deforestation in the Amazon reaches lowest levels ever recorded
in 2009
17/11/2009
- Secretariat for Social Communication of the Presidency
of Brazil - Deforestation rates in the Brazilian Amazon
dropped 45.7 percent from August 2008 to July 2009, Brazilian
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva announced today
during a meeting with state governors and mayors in Brasília.
According to new data based on analysis of satellite imagery
by the National Institute for Space Research (Inpe), an
estimate of 7,008 square kilometers of forest were cleared
in Brazil during the 12-month period, the lowest rate since
the government started monitoring deforestation in 1988.
"The
new deforestation data represents an extraordinary and significant
reduction for Brazil. Climate change is the most challenging
issue that we face today", said President Lula following
the meeting.
According
to the Ministry of the Environment, the slowing deforestation
levels are primarily a result of the Action Plan for Deforestation
Control and Prevention in the Amazon, a set of cross-government
policies and measures launched in 2004 to improve monitoring,
strengthen enforcement, define conservation areas and foster
sustainable activities in the region. With the support of
13 government agencies, the plan played a major role in
helping reduce deforestation in the Amazon by 74.8 percent
from 2004 to 2009.
Enhanced
surveillance and enforcement
The
Inpe data indicates that the projected 32 percent increase
in inspection operations over the last year was instrumental
in inhibiting illegal deforestation in the Amazon. Satellite
images from Inpe's near real-time deforestation detection
system enabled government inspectors to focus their efforts
where deforestation is most critical and act quickly to
prevent new areas from being cleared.
As
a result of this surveillance, the Brazilian Environment
Institute apprehended around 230,000 cubic meters of wood,
414 trucks and tractors, and embargoed 502,000 hectares
of land linked to illegal deforestation activities in the
region over the period from August 2008 to July 2009, leading
the government to issue over R$ 2.8 billion reais (US$ 1.6
billion) in fines.
In
addition to fines, the government used other tools to financially
constrain those whose activities contribute to the destruction
of the forest. This includes a resolution enacted by the
National Monetary Council in mid-2008 that requires farmers
and ranchers in the Amazon to meet environmental criteria
in order to obtain loans from public and private banks.
Conservation
areas and sustainable activities
Federal
and state governments also worked to create around 50 million
hectares in new conservation units in the Amazon from 2004
to 2008, while another 10 million hectares in indigenous
lands were granted recognition in the same period. Today,
43 percent of the legal Amazon is federally protected.
The
government also initiated a concession scheme for sustainable
management in public forests. The first concessions were
granted in August 2008, enabling three private groups to
carry sustainable logging and extraction activities in 96,000
hectares of the Jamari Public Forest, in the state of Rondônia.
Deforestation
and climate change
Deforestation
in the Amazon region is the main source of Brazil's greenhouse
gas emissions. According to the first National Inventory
of Greenhouse Gases, up to 75 percent of Brazil's emissions
come from deforestation and land use change.
For
this reason, tackling deforestation is at the center of
Brazil's strategy to combat global warming. Launched in
December 2008, the National Plan on Climate Change sets
targets to cut deforestation rates by 80 percent by 2020,
which would avoid 4.8 billion tons in CO2 emissions during
this period.
To
meet these goals, the plan sets out a number of actions
and programs to combat illegal logging and provide sustainable
economic alternatives to the people living in the Amazon,
among other measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
in different sectors.
Do
Ministério do Meio Ambiente