Rainforest destruction slows

Last updated 10:18 13/11/2009

Relevant offers

Destruction of the Amazon rain forest in Brazil has fallen to its lowest annual level in 21 years, the government says, in a boost to the country's green credentials ahead of a global climate summit.

Deforestation plunged 45 percent in the year to July to 7008 sq km, the lowest figure achieved since the National Institute of Space Studies began monitoring destruction of the world's largest forest in 1988.

"We are cleaning up our house," Dilma Rousseff, chief of staff for President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, told reporters at a news conference in the capital, Brasilia.

A sharp drop had been widely expected based on preliminary figures from the space agency, which uses satellites to measure deforestation.

Brazil has been under pressure for years to slow the encroachment of loggers and ranchers who are blamed for much of the destruction of the forest, which has lost about 20 percent of its area since the 1970s.

Deforestation in Brazil reached a peak of 27,329 sq km in the 2003/2004 period.

The government says improved policing has helped cut deforestation but environmentalists argue that lower commodity prices resulting from the global economic downturn have also been a factor. Deforestation has in the past increased when demand for soybeans, beef and timber have gone up.

Brazil's management of the Amazon, whose destruction accounts for about two thirds of its carbon emissions, is expected to be a key issue at next month's Copenhagen summit, which seeks to frame a new global treaty on climate change.

"Today, we are conscious that the climate question is the most serious we are facing." said Lula, who called the fall in deforestation "extraordinary."

The environment ministry is proposing that roughly half of Brazil's proposed 40 percent carbon emissions cut would come from reducing deforestation. The government is aiming for an 80 percent reduction in the deforestation rate by 2020, based on the annual average of 19,500 sq km between 1996 and 2005.

Environmental group Greenpeace said in a statement that while the sharp drop was important, there was still too much deforestation and the government's target was not ambitious enough.

"The president ... will be happy if in 11 years' time the Amazon forest is being destroyed at a rate of a little less than three cities the size of Sao Paulo a year," it said, referring to South America's largest city.

Ad Feedback

- Reuters

2 comments
Post a comment
Muzza   #2   12:59 pm Nov 13 2009

I thought with McDonald's boom through this recession, there would have been more demand for farms. But, note, the forest is still disappearing!!! Just at a slightly slower rate than last year.

Dr William Morgan   #1   11:13 am Nov 13 2009

What these people are doing is misunderestimating the total negative effects of deforestation of the Amazon basin. Slowing the logging is like holding a candle to the sun - it is outshone by the very fierceness of its own heat. And the rangers and poachers who are responsible for this misunderestimation are the very ones who light the fires that feed the flames, all the while wearing D&G sunglasses so that they cannot see the burning light and listening to Bono on imported iPods. Bono has only empty words when it comes to Brazil, and his sunglasses are not D&G rip-offs but rose-tinted ones like the kind small girls wear: grow up Bono. So while the misunderestimaters are busy listening to little girl bands, they should be listening to something more drums and more bass. That is the prescription from Dr Morgan.

Post comment


Required

Required. Will not be published.
Registration is not required to post a comment but if you , you will not have to enter your details each time you comment. Registered members also have access to extra features. Create an account now.


Maximum of 1750 characters (about 300 words)

I have read and accepted the terms and conditions
These comments are moderated. Your comment, if approved, may not appear immediately. Please direct any queries about comment moderation to the Opinion Editor at blogs@stuff.co.nz
Special offers

Featured Promotions

Sponsored Content

Blog