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1. Effective measures to tackle deforestation include mapping rural properties and ownership; curbing illegal occupation of public land; harsh penalties for illegal deforestation; driving development to areas away from the rainforest; increasing support to sustainable activities.
2. The preliminary figures come from a satellite system (DETER) which is used to track where deforestation is happening, rather than measure deforestation rates. Past experience shows that DETER figures are usually 40% of the actual deforestation rate as shown by the more detailed Satellite PRODES system.
3. The moratorium was announced by the soya industry on July 24th 2006, after Greenpeace and local communities from Santarém, Brazil exposed the threat of soya to the Amazon. http://www.greenpeace.org/international/press/releases/soya-traders-agree-to-a-morato# <http://www.greenpeace.org/international/press/releases/soya-traders-agree-to <http://www.greenpeace.org/international/press/releases/soya-traders-agree-to>-a-morato>
4. In August 2007, Lula boasted to the world that Brazil had cut deforestation by 50 per cent in the previous two years. Days later Greenpeace exposed that the Brazilian Government's Agency for Land Reform (INCRA) was allowing further destruction of large areas of rainforest by assigning them as ‘land settlements’ http://www.greenpeace.org/international/press/releases/greenpeace-exposes-brazilian-g
Paulo Adario, Greenpeace Amazon Campaign Coordinator: +55 92 8115 8928