Brazil clears 8 miles of Amazon’s tropical forests to make room for the UN Conference on the Climate
This November organization of the United Nations will descend in the city of Belem, Brazil in an attempt to resolve climate change. The UN Climate Conference in 2025 or the COP30 will lead 50,000 people in the city. Brazil cut parts of the Amazon tropical forests to build a four-lane highway and make it easier for these 50,000 people to arrive a little.
AS Reported by the BBCThe State Government of steam cleared eight miles of the Amazon tropical forests to build the highway. The BBC article has photos of the clear forest floor, where logs are accumulated along a road that will soon hold concrete and passing cars.
Overall, the Amazon’s forests and tropical forests are essential for combating global temperatures. Andre Aranha Root to Lago, a Brazilian career diplomat, heading for COP30, eloquently made the forestry case in A letter that publishes Earlier this week, which exposed its vision for the conference, climate and the world.
“When we meet at the Brazilian Amazon in November, we have to listen to the latest science and re-evaluate the extraordinary role that has already been played by the forests and the people who retain and rely on them,” DO LAGO wrote.
Local resident Claudio Verequette lives near the highway and previously earned live fruits to the harvest of Asai. These trees are gone, cut off to make the way to the UN Conference on the Climate. “Our fear is that one day someone will come here and say, ‘Here’s some money. We need this area to build a gas station or build a warehouse. “And then we’ll have to leave,” he told the BBC.
The highway is cut through the forest, cutting off access to animals and people living in the forest for generations. What was once the whole area will soon be two halves blocked by the sidewalk. Verequete told the BBC that his village would not even have onramp to the highway. They will simply experience that fits their oncoming noise walls. Scientists and environmentalists, those who know the exceptional role of the Amazon, told the BBC that they fear that the new highway would devastate local ecology.
Para wanted to build a highway to Belem, a city with more than two million people since 2012. But environmental protection around the Amazon tropical forests has always been prevented. In the perverse turn of fate, the upcoming climate conference gave the state the power to build infrastructure to support it. And so the Amazon was taken down. The highway will be called Avenida Liberdade or “Avenue Liberty”.
Avenida Liberdade is part of a much more infrastructure project that Pará hopes to revive Belem. This spends $ 81 million to expand the airport and build a five million square meter park. The city is building numerous hotels, and organizers plan to sail with cruise ships with high capacity in the port of the city to accommodate people who cannot find a place in the hotels.
Bele was chosen on purpose. This is the first UN climate conference to be held in the Amazon, an important natural miracle, which is essential for regulating the temperature of the planet. Brazilian President Louis Inasio Lula da Silva is campaigning a forest protection campaign and at the beginning of her term of office delay deforestation. But he has not stopped and Lula has even approved projects such as allowing oil companies to do Drilling At the mouth of the Amazon River.
“Forests can buy us time in the climate in our fast -closing window of opportunities,” Lago says in his letter. “If we turn the deforestation and restore the lost, we can unlock the massive removal of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere while restoring ecosystems to life.”
He is right. It is a pity that his country has just cleared eight miles of the Amazon tropical forests to make way to the conference for which he is preparing in this letter.