Arab Times

Norway cuts forest protection payments to Brazil

Temer says Brazil working to safeguard Amazon forest

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OSLO, June 24, (RTRS): Norway told visiting Brazilian President Michel Temer on Friday that it would slash its payments to help safeguard the Amazon rainforest in 2017 by more than half to about $35 million because of a rise in forest destructio­n.

Rich from producing oil and gas, Norway has invested more than $1.1 billion in an Amazon Fund since 2008 to help Brazil protect the forests, which are under threat from logging and their conversion to farmland.

“I expressed concern that deforestat­ion has risen somewhat (in recent years after past successes),” Prime Minister Erna Solberg told reporters after talks with Temer, who is visiting Oslo to promote investment in Brazil after a trip to Moscow.

Temer said Brazil was working to protect the Amazon, for example, by expanding national parks. “Brazil is one of the biggest, if not the biggest, environmen­tal reserves in the world,” he said. Norway’s Environmen­t Ministry said payments, under a performanc­ebased plan to reward forest protection, were likely to be about $35 million in 2017, around $65 million less than the previous year when fewer forests were destroyed.

“This should not in any way be understood as a weakening of our commitment to the partnershi­p,” Environmen­t Minister Vidar Helgesen said in a statement. “On the contrary, we stand by our commitment­s, and if deforestat­ion is brought back down, our payments will go back up.”

Norway paid about 1 billion Norwegian crowns ($118 million) a year to Brazil from 2011-15, when Brazil successful­ly slowed forest losses.

Norway has been the biggest foreign donor to protect tropical forests from Brazil to Indonesia, partly because they are big natural stores of greenhouse gases and help to slow climate change.

Brazil’s deforestat­ion climbed to 8,000 sq kms (3,088 square miles) in 2016 — about the size of Greece’s Mediterran­ean island of Crete — from 6,200 in 2015. Recent losses, however, are far below the 19,000 sq kms recorded in 2005, Brazilian satellite data show.

Solberg reaffirmed a 2015 agreement to extend the forest pact until 2020. “I see no reason to renegotiat­e that agreement,” she said.

Outside Solberg’s office, about 40 people protested against Temer with banners featuring slogans such as “stop rainforest destructio­n”.

“We’re here to show that people in Norway are extremely concerned by the rise in deforestat­ion,” Lars Loevold, head of the Rainforest Foundation Norway, told Reuters. He also said that Temer should do more for indigenous people.

 ??  ?? Crown Prince Haakon of Norway (left), and King Harald of Norway, (right), pose with Brazilian President Michel Temer as he is welcomed to the Royal Palace in Oslo, Norway, on June 23. Temer praised Norway’s financial contributi­on to the fund aimed at...
Crown Prince Haakon of Norway (left), and King Harald of Norway, (right), pose with Brazilian President Michel Temer as he is welcomed to the Royal Palace in Oslo, Norway, on June 23. Temer praised Norway’s financial contributi­on to the fund aimed at...

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