Reuters AlertNet Full site
Homepage | Newsdesk | NGO Latest | Crisis briefings | Country profiles | MediaWatch | Jobs | Alerting | Login

NEWSDESK

Brazil's Lula says Amazon clearing slows
26 Oct 2006 20:52:25 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Andrea Welsh

BRASILIA, Brazil, Oct 26 (Reuters) - With three days until a presidential election run-off, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Thursday said new data shows a dramatic slowdown in the destruction of the Amazon.

Deforestation of the world's largest rainforest dropped by about a third this season, Lula told a news conference.

Satellite estimates indicated 5,058 sq miles (13,100 sq km) were cleared from August 2005-July 2006, versus 7,255 sq miles (18,790 sq km) in the previous season.

Lula, who has been criticized by some environmental groups for not doing enough to save the rainforest, usually leaves the announcement of rainforest statistics to Environment Minister Marina Silva. Lula is expected to defeat opposition candidate Geraldo Alckmin in Sunday's second round of voting.

Last month, Silva gave preliminary estimates of an 11 percent drop in deforestation, with 6,448 sq miles (16,700 sq km) cleared versus 7,255 sq miles (18,790 sq km) the previous year.

The new estimate was based on more accurate satellite data. But only two-thirds of the data have been collected and final figures will not be ready before the end of the year.

Land-clearing in the Amazon surged after Lula took office in 2003 in large part because booming world demand for Brazilian commodities tempted ranchers to graze more cattle, farmers to plant more soy and loggers to fell more trees.

In 2004, a chunk of rainforest the size of Massachusetts was lost, but land-clearing slowed by a third the next year as global commodities demand slowed.

Deforestation is difficult to track because of the Amazon's vast size and because many small wildcat miners and loggers fell trees.

Lula struck a nationalistic note as he announced the latest figures, apparently responding to suggestions from foreign environmentalists that international controls should be exercised over the area.

"Brazil's sovereignty over (the Amazon) is unquestionable. We won't give up control of this extraordinary biological reserve," he said.

International criticism of deforestation is a sensitive issue in Brazil, where nearly half of all land is covered by undeveloped rainforest.


AlertNet news is provided by

Email this article       Send comments

Countries

Small country map
© 2004 Europa Technologies Ltd.
Reset map

•  Brazil profile

· View Brasília
· View Amazonas


MORE >>

NGO latest

•  CCF's Global Call to Action Against Poverty Worldwide
CCF - International

•  CCF Joins Global Call to Action Against Poverty
CCF - International

•  CCF Joins Global Call to Action Against Poverty
CCF - International

•  ADRA Responds After Fire in Makeshift Community Leaves Thousands Homeless
ADRA - International

•  Brazilian activists shot dead in broad daylight
Christian Aid - UK

MORE >>

Latest news

•  Brazil's Lula says Amazon clearing slows

•  Brazil's landless poised to end election truce

•  FEATURE-U.S. soy farmers in Brazil weather hard times

•  ANALYSIS-Argentine diplomacy plays second fiddle to voters

•  Carbon market might help rainforests - World Bank

MORE >>

Disclaimers |  Copyright |  Privacy |  Contact Us |  Feedback |  About Us |  RSS XML

Last updated:Thu Oct 26 20:53:35 2006