Stabroek News

Amazon Indigenous leaders promote reforestat­ion for degraded forest lands

-

BRASILIA, (Reuters) - Brazil's agricultur­al research agency Embrapa yesterday opened an online learning programme called "Sowing forests on Indigenous lands" to help Amazon communitie­s reforest degraded land in the rainforest and beyond.

The initiative, which is backed by the French government, was launched by Kayapó Chief Raoni Metuktire, a tireless environmen­tal campaigner for the Amazon and Chief Almir of the Suruí people.

Embrapa's course will focus on how to collect, germinate and store tree seeds, and later units will show how to build greenhouse­s to grow seedlings of local tree species and eventually how to plant them.

The aim is to encourage dozens of villages in the Amazon and elsewhere to plant one million trees a year, Embrapa said.

The purpose is to recover degraded forest lands destroyed by illegal loggers and gold miners, land-grabbing invaders who cleared trees to make way for cattle pastures, and forest fires.

"Reforestat­ion will help balance the climate. With more trees there will be less heat on our lands," Raoni told Reuters.

Surui Chief Almir said the program will start with 10 Indigenous territorie­s, including the Xingu National Park, Brazil's first reservatio­n that has been besieged by commercial farming, and the largest one, the Yanomami reservatio­n bordering with Venezuela that has the most degraded lands due to mining.

"Reforestin­g will reduce the degradatio­n of Indigenous lands and, ultimately, contribute to Brazil achieving its goals in slowing climate change," he said in an interview.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana