The decree by President Lula of Brazil to create the 6.4 million
hectare (around 16 million acres) conservation area is a great victory
for the people of the Amazon battling landgrabbers, cattle ranchers and
loggers. The decree calls for around 1.6 million hectares to be
permanently protected and totally off limits to logging and
deforestation.
Another
2.8 million hectares will be used for sustainable logging concessions
to prevent deforestation and ensure well-managed forests. Development
guidelines will be improved in an additional 2 million hectares of
forest.
Whilst the 6.4 million hectares is a victory for many
communities in the Amazon, it still represents less than two percent of
the total Brazilian Amazon. An area one-third the size of the new
conservation area is lost every year in the Amazon to logging, soy
plantations and cattle ranchers.
"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. The Amazon and the life it
supports is 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," said Paulo Adário, forest
campaign co-ordinator for Greenpeace Brazil.
The new
conservation areas will be created in a crucial part of the Amazon
alongside the notorious highway called the BR163. The road cuts through
the heart of the Amazon and a promise by the Brazilian Government to
pave the road has resulted in accelerated rates of deforestation in the
area. Without the increased protection this decree provides, this area
would have soon been destroyed for soy plantations and cattle ranches.
Greenpeace activists block a 135-km illegal road, in the National Forest (Flona) of Altamira, a protected area created by the Brazilian Government in 1988. The road cuts directly through the National Forest and is used for illegal logging operations and deforestation inside the protected area.
In
the city of Curitiba in southern Brazil, the Convention on Biological
Diversity (CBD) will meet in March to work on plans to protect the
world's biodiversity from being lost to the world permanently. One of
the main aims of the CBD is to create a global network of protected
areas that would form the basis for the protection of the world's
plants and animals by 2010.
If the goals of the CBD are to be
reached, Brazil and many other countries will have to greatly increase
the rate of forest protection. The consequences of failing to do so are
more than just a broken international treaty. With only 20 percent of
the world's original ancient forest still standing, the fate of these
forests, the wildlife that lives in them and the millions of people who
depend on them everyday for their livelihood is at stake.
Canada recently announced that over two million hectares of the
Great Bear Rainforest
along the pacific west coast of the country will be protected along
with sustainable management for a further four million plus hectares.
With Brazil adding another 6.4 million hectares, the global network of
protected areas are beginning to fall into place.
However,
with around 10 million hectares of forest around the world being
destroyed each and every year, there is still much work to be done.