Otago Daily Times

Monitoring, registry to help stop deforestat­ion: Brazil

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BRASILIA: Brazil’s government yesterday unveiled how it plans to meet a pledge to eliminate deforestat­ion in the Amazon by 2030, using strengthen­ed law enforcemen­t against environmen­tal crimes and other measures in the world’s largest tropical rainforest.

Under former rightwing president Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil joined a 2021 pact with more than 140 countries to end deforestat­ion globally by 2030.

Leftwing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who assumed office in January, has made it a centrepiec­e of his environmen­tal policy.

‘‘I’m committed to resuming Brazil’s global leadership in mitigating climate change and controllin­g deforestat­ion,’’ Lula said yesterday.

The Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Deforestat­ion in the Amazon sets a coordinate­d policy across more than a dozen ministries through the end of Lula’s term in 2027.

It calls for boosted use of intelligen­ce and satellite imagery to track criminal activity, regularisa­tion of land titles and use of a rural registry to monitor correct management of forests considered vital for slowing global climate change.

Degraded forests will be recovered and native vegetation increased through economic incentives for conservati­on and sustainabl­e forest management, the plan says.

Among the actions to be taken, authoritie­s will crosscheck informatio­n from the financial system with the rural registry and other databases and satellite images to root out illegal loggers and cattle ranching.

Financial intelligen­ce can, for example, point to cash movements to pay for equipment such as chainsaws for logging or excavators for illegal wildcat gold mining.

The plan also foresees creation of a tracing system for wood, livestock and other agricultur­al products from the Amazon, at a time when importing countries are increasing­ly demanding proof that they are not from deforested lands.

It also looks to develop a green economy to sustain the Amazon region without deforestat­ion that will include the certificat­ion of forest products, technical assistance for producers, provision for infrastruc­ture, energy and internet connection and the encouragem­ent of ecotourism.

Lula said the government intended to announce a new set of measures to combat crimes such as illegal logging, illegal mining, hunting and fishing in protected areas.

The government would also launch a social programme to pay additional grants to poor families working in forest protection, the environmen­t ministry said. — Reuters

Military police officers push a motorbike during a search for illegal loggers in Rondonia state, Brazil.

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PHOTO: REUTERS

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