Victory again: Huge Amazon area protected

Posted by admin — 14 February 2006 at 9:00am - Comments

Greenpeace activists block an illegal road in Para State, Brazil

Just one week after the excellent news about the Great Bear Rainforest comes another stunning victory with the announcement that a huge area of the Amazon rainforest will be protected from destructive logging.

The Brazilian government is trumpeting the creation by Presidential Decree of new conservation units totalling 6.4m hectares, an area twice the size of Belgium. The news comes only days after the first anniversary of the murder of Sister Dorothy Stang, assassinated as a result of her campaign to protect the rainforest and the communities that depend on it for their survival.

Of the area to be protected, 1.6m hectares will be permanently protected and completely sealed off to loggers. Logging concessions will be available in another 2.8m hectares where good management practices will be established to ensure sustainable and eco-sensitive practices, and a further 2m hectares will see the benefit of improved development guidelines.

A great step forward but much more needed

"This is a great step towards the protection and sustainable use of the world's last ancient forests but is only a fraction of what is needed," said Paulo Adario, forest campaign co-ordinator for Greenpeace Brazil. "The Amazon and the life it supports are seriously threatened by destructive logging and land clearance to grow crops like soy. We need more initiatives like this to save the world's last ancient forests."

The Amazon rainforest is under threat from drought, fires, land clearance and illegal and destructive logging - the equivalent of 18 football fields are cleared every minute - and this has led to a dramatic loss of biodiversity as well as contributing towards climate change.

The area to be protected is particularly vulnerable to exploitation because a road that cuts through the region, the BR-163 in Par� State, is about to be paved. This could open the forest up to further soy plantations, cattle ranching, logging and other forms of destruction.

However this is another fantastic victory for Greenpeace and our allies, with hopefully more to come. Next month sees the Convention on Biological Diversity being held in Brazil - a perfect opportunity for governments worldwide to make good on their promises and ensure the survival of more of the world's rapidly-disappearing ancient forests.

About Earth Lady

Coordinator of the North Kent group and a Garden Design student

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