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Amazon protected from soya growers for another year
Posted by saunvedan on 18 June 2008.
We have some truly excellent news to share about the ongoing campaign to protect the Amazon rainforest. The moratorium on deforestation for new soya plantations and the use of forced labour - which was the result of our McDonald's campaign two years ago - has been extended for another year. The original announcement by the major soya traders in Brazil only ran until this July, but now they've signed up to a further 12 months.
Read more »New Brazilian Environment Minister says Amazon soya deal should be extended to beef and timber
Paulo Adario, Director of Greenpeace's Amazon campaign said:
"Minc's words indicate a promising approach by the Brazilian government. If an Amazon deforestation firewall is created, with a series of moratoria covering soya, timber and beef, this could buy the necessary time to put in place permanent protection; protection for the forest, the biodiversity, the people and ultimately the climate. Greenpeace will hold Minc to his words and stands ready to help in any way possible. The current challenges for the soya industry and the government to implement their commitments remain tough, and they include the major task of mapping rural properties and ownership in the Amazon. A one year extension may not be long enough to build the tools necessary to ensure that soya production does not result in further deforestation."
Note to the editor:
Translation of Minc's quote: "The moratorium is a successful initiative by civil society and the soya industry. The Federal Government is entering the process now and is committed to register and license all rural properties in the Amazon biome," Minc told reporters. "Inspired by the success of this initiative, the Brazilian government is negotiating similar approaches with the timber and beef industries."
Greenpeace welcomes the extension of major deal to protect Amazon rainforest from soya farming
A critical deal struck by Greenpeace and McDonald's to stop deforestation of the Amazon rainforest for soya has been extended by a year. There had been concerns that pressure from soya barons and rising commodity prices would have threatened the deal.
The announcement was made at a press conference in Brasilia by the soya traders association (called ABIOVE), together with Brazil's new Environment Minister Carlos Minc, Greenpeace and other NGOs.
The moratorium prohibits the purchase of soya from newly deforested areas in the Amazon, or from farmers using indentured or forced labourers. It was first agreed in 2006 and was the direct result of a three year Greenpeace investigation into the links between soya and rainforest destruction, documented in the report "Eating up the Amazon" (1). The study documented illegal deforestation and the use of slave labour in the soya industry, and tracked Amazon soya from the rainforest to consumers' plates in Europe. As a result McDonald's and other multi-nationals joined Greenpeace in calling for the moratorium on the expansion of soya farming into untouched areas of rainforest in Brazil.
The moratorium extension will now run until July 2009 and was warmly welcomed by an alliance of soya consumer companies, led by McDonalds, Marks & Spencer, ASDA and Carrefour in a joint statement, who have also renewed their commitment to remaining actively engaged in this process.
This success is despite the fact that several soya producers had begun using rising agricultural commodity prices and global demand for grain to pressure ABIOVE and traders not to extend the moratorium. A handful had even used the global food crisis to justify further Amazon deforestation.
"The decision to extend the moratorium against the
backdrop of rising commodity prices and the food crises shows that government
and industry now understand that it is possible to protect the forest, combat
climate change and still ensure food production," said Paulo Adario coordinator
of Greenpeace's Amazon campaign.
Greenpeace, together with other NGOs,
will continue to help ABIOVE to bring effective governance to the soya industry
in the Amazon. Greenpeace warns however, that a one year extension may not be
long enough to develop the vital tools necessary to ensure that soya production
does not result in further deforestation. (2) The organisation also believes
that the ongoing involvement of the Brazilian government is key to providing the
framework essential for farmers to comply with the law.
(3)
In response to the active participation of Brazil's Environment Minister in the
announcement, Adario continued, "We are delighted to see the new Environment
Minister take an active role in ensuring the continuation of the moratorium.
Such high level support helps ABIOVE and the traders convince farmers to support
the initiative. His support also serves as a warning to those who continue to
destroy forests that their soya will be rejected by the market."
Tropical forest destruction is responsible for nearly one-fifth of
global greenhouse gas emissions, second only to the energy sector. 75% of
Brazil's emissions come from forest
destruction, making it the world's fourth largest greenhouse gas emitter.
For more information contact:
Greenpeace UK Press Office _+44 207 865 8225
Tica Minami, press officer for Greenpeace Amazon: + 55 92 8114 4517
Paulo Adario, Greenpeace Amazon Director: + 31 6 46 23 36 95 or +55 92 8115 8928
Daniela Montalto, Greenpeace International campaigner: + 31 6 46 16 20 33
Background images and footage
available:
Greenpeace International photo
desk: + 44 7801 615 889
Greenpeace International video desk: + 31 6 46 16 20
15
Notes to the editor:
(1) http://www.greenpeace.org/international/...
(2) On June 3, 2008, the Brazilian Space Agency INPE showed that interim Amazon deforestation statistics increased from 145 km2 in March to 1,423 km2 in April 2008. More than 70% of the deforestation occurred in Mato Grosso which is the largest soya producing state in Brazil.
(4) 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 and increasing support to sustainable activities. The System of Environmental Licensing of Rural Properties, a mechanism that enables authorities to monitor farms using geo-referenced maps and satellite imagery, must be implemented.
Greenpeace volunteers take on climate change with spades and shovels
Posted by tracy on 9 April 2008.
Our office in New Zealand has turned their hands to extreme gardening. The island nation is well known for its burgeoning agricultural industry and now the government is converting 25,000 hectares of forest into large-scale intensive dairy farms.
They are currently clearing in Tahorakuri forest on the central north island and the Ministry for Agriculture and Forestry estimates that 445,000 hectares of forest are at risk of being destroyed and converted primarily for dairy farms. So our office there got their spades out.
Read more »The Weekly Geek: anaerobic digestion
Posted by bex on 20 February 2008.
Ken Livingstone wants it for London, Hilary Benn is giving money to it and Adam and Debbie are bringing it to Ambridge. After a couple of millennia in the sidelines, anaerobic digestion has finally hit the big time (well, The Archers, anyway) - which is why we've chosen it for this second edition of the Weekly Geek.
Every year, we bury thousands of tonnes of waste food in landfill sites around the UK. We produce almost one and a half million tonnes of sewage a year (don't do the maths - it's disturbing), which is mostly spread on land, incinerated or buried as landfill. And we produce enormous amounts of agricultural waste on our farms. All of this waste breaks down to release greenhouse gases as it decomposes.
Read more »GM crops can help prevent climate change? Shurely shome mishtake
Posted by jamie on 8 January 2008.
Those pesky biotech companies never give up. After recently spinning the line that GM crops can be used to safeguard food production from the ravages of climate change, their latest wheeze is to try and convince us that GM technology can help reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Read more »Palming us off
Posted by andyt on 7 January 2008.
This blog by Andy Tait, our biodiversity campaign manager, first appeared on Comment Is Free.
As the Guardian reports, scientists from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, writing in the magazine Science, explain how "first generation" biofuels, largely generated from food crops, could actually be causing more damage to the climate than the traditional fossil fuels they were designed to replace. These views add to similar concerns expressed by many others including the UN, OECD, numerous academics, environmental and developmental NGOs and an increasing number in the private sector. National Express, for example, recently suspended its trials of biodiesel, largely due to environmental concerns.
Read more »FAQ: Palm oil, forests and climate change
Forested peatlands cleared for oil palm plantations in Riau, Indonesia © Greenpeace/Oka Budhi
Why is palm oil a problem?
The global palm oil industry is expanding rapidly: it's used in an increasing number of food and cosmetic products, while demands for its use in biofuels like biodiesel are set to soar in the near future. Tropical rainforests and peatlands, in South East Asia are being destroyed to make way for oil palm plantations. Not only is this a disaster for biodiversity and local communities, it will also release vast amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, accelerating climate change.
Greenpeace activists held captive in the Amazon
Posted by jamie on 18 October 2007.

A mob led by loggers prevents Greenpeace activists from leaving Brazilian government offices ©Greenpeace/Rodrigo Baleia
There's been further friction in the Amazon between Greenpeace staff and angry loggers and townspeople. It's all ended peacefully but the situation was tense and they were holed up overnight under police protection. This from Reuters:
Police escorted a group of Greenpeace activists from a remote town in the Brazilian Amazon on Wednesday after hundreds of loggers and townspeople besieged them overnight in protest against an anti-global warming campaign, the environmental organization said.
Read more »GM: back with a vengeance?
Posted by jamie on 17 September 2007.
As if Monday mornings weren't generally bad enough, the Guardian's headline this morning warns of the "return of GM". Read more »


