Brazil aiming to end deforestation in Amazon
By ANIFriday, December 4, 2009
WASHINGTON - In a new research, scientists have said that the government of Brazil is aiming to end deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon and reduce carbon emissions in the country.
According to Daniel Nepstad, a senior scientist at the Woods Hole Research Center and the study’s lead author, “Market forces and Brazil’s political will are converging in an unprecedented opportunity to end deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon with 80 percent of the forest still standing.”
Brazil has lowered deforestation rates 64 percent since 2005. This remarkable achievement was possible through a government crack-down on illegal activities in the region.
It was helped by a retraction of the cattle and soybean industries, and a growing effort to exclude deforesters from the beef and soy markets.
Researchers say that Brazil could build upon this progress to end forest clearing by the year 2020, and the additional funding that will be required to reach this goal.
The study estimates that 6.5 to 18 billion dollars will be needed from 2010 to 2020 to achieve the end of deforestation, resulting in a 2 to 5 percent reduction in global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.
The steps include the support of low-deforestation livelihoods for forest peoples and smallholders; identifying and rewarding responsible cattle ranchers and farmers; improved enforcement of environmental laws; and investments in protected area management.
This estimate utilizes a sophisticated economic model of the Amazon region that estimates and maps the value of forgone profits from ranching and soy farming that are associated with forest conservation.
According to Britaldo Soares-Filho of the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, “Our economic models integrate the best available information on soils, roads, and the costs of production to capture the economic logic of the Amazon’s drivers of deforestation.”
Brazil has emerged as one of the most progressive nations in the world in assuming commitments to lower greenhouse gas emissions within the United Nations climate negotiations.
In December of 2008, this nation declared that it would cut deforestation to 20 percent of its historic level by 2020.
Brazil’s position going into Copenhagen next week, when climate negotiations should culminate in a new climate agreement, could be even more progressive. (ANI)