Aquaverde News

Whats happening in the Amazon

14/11/2011
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Grace s’investit pour Aquaverde à CARITIVART

CARITIVART est un projet caritatif, qui invite comédiens, politiques, chanteurs, sportifs, présentateurs, chefs
étoilés ou humoristes à se prêter au jeu de la création artistique, l’instant d’un tableau.
A travers ce projet tout à fait original, 50 personnalités s'exposent dans tous les sens du terme, offrant leurs
talents à une association de leur choix.
Au mois de février 2012, les 50 toiles seront exposées et vendues aux enchères, offrant 75% des fonds générés aux associations caritatives désignées par les célébrités elles-mêmes.

Grace, marraine de l'association Aquaverde, y présentera un tableau dont la vente soutiendra l'action de l'association.


Le dossier CARITIVART en PDF

A voir :  www.graceforest.com

Grand Hotel Kempinski Genève

03/11/2011
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Nouveau Partenariat avec le Grand Hotel Kempinski Genève


Durant son séjour en Suisse en novembre 2011, Chef Almir Surui a rencontré Mr Thierry Lavalley, directeur du Grand Hotel Kempinski Genève dans le cadre de la mise en place de son partenariat avec Aquaverde.

Le grand Hotel Kempinski soutien la plantation de 1000 arbres durant la saison des pluies 2011-2012, chez les indiens Surui au Brésil, dans le cadre du projet de reforestation PAMINE.

L'Hotel

25/07/2011
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La guerra del indio geek

 

  

Proporcionalmente, el estado más afectado por la tala ilegal en la Amazonia es Rondônia. Ahí, el pueblo suruí está dando la batalla apoyado por la tecnología. Gracias a una alianza con Google Earth y a su líder, Almir Narayamoga, smartphones y GPS son las nuevas armas en los bosques de Brasil.

Por Nicolás Alonso y Priscila Azevedo Rocha 06/07/2011

Articlo completo :

http://www.quepasa.cl/articulo/tecnologia—ciencia/2011/07/23-6082-9-la-guerra-del-indio-geek.shtml

29/06/2011
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Líder indígena Suruí está marcado para morrer

Almir Suruí recorre à Secretaria Nacional de Direitos Humanos para garantir sua vida e a de seu povo. Cinco líderes indígenas da etnia Suruí foram assassinados nas últimas semanas. Outras estão ameaçadas

BRASÍLIA – Mais uma liderança da Amazônia está marcada para morrer. Desta vez, o alvo é o índio Almir Suruí, de Rondônia. Almir é coordenador do Grupo de Trabalho Amazônico (GTA) e uma das lideranças indígenas mais atuantes da região, tendo inclusive seu trabalho reconhecido internacionalmente.

“Eu e meu povo estamos jurados de morte”, contou Almir Suruí em recente reunião com o diretor da Secretaria Nacional de Direitos Humanos, Fernando Matos, e a assessoria do Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Paula Vanucci, aos quais pediu proteção de vida. Participaram ainda do encontro dirigentes da ONG Equipe Conservação da Amazônia (ACT Brasil), da Associação de Defesa Etnoambiental Kanindé e o presidente do GTA, Rubens Gomes.  O governo prometeu averiguar a denúncia e adotar todas as medidas necessárias para proteger a vida dos índios.

Segundo Almir Suruí, as ameaças não são recentes, mas se intensificaram nos últimos dias. Há dois anos, Suruí se reuniu com dirigentes de vários órgãos governamentais para alertar que seu trabalho em defesa dos indígenas de Rondônia estava despertando a ira dos latifundiários, fazendeiros e madeireiros daquele Estado. Na época, Suruí pediu medidas de segurança para garantir sua vida e a de seu pouco. “Até agora, infelizmente, pouca coisa de concreto foi feita, e eu e meus irmãos estão jurados de morte”, conta o líder.

Suruí afirmou que o clima atual é de maior violência e complexidade, principalmente após a morte de outros líderes no Acre, Amazonas e Rondônia.  Disse que as recentes mortes de castanheiros, trabalhadores rurais e lavradores da Amazônia contribuem para aumentar a sensação de impunidade e a lista dos marcados para morrer só tem crescido. Para Suruí, as ameaças decorrem do fato de a maioria das lideranças lutarem pela aprovação do Código Florestal na Câmara dos Deputados.

“Sempre lidei com as ameaças de grupos que querem utilizar a floresta de maneira errada na nossa região, mas agora estou ainda mais preocupado, pois nas últimas semanas líderes do povo Paiter Suruí também foram ameaçados”, conta. Almir Suruí afirma que  alguns índios de sua comunidade foram aliciados por madeireiros e estão também ameaçando o líder Suruí de morte.

Almir disse que procurou as autoridades para evitar novas mortes, como a de Obede Loyla Souza, 31, pai de três filhos, assassinado dia 9 de junho. Outros cinco líderes assassinados nas últimas semanas. “É o cúmulo sabermos que ainda existe um Brasil cego, surdo e que resolve as coisas de forma tão sanguinária e cruel”, protesta o líder indígena.


AGÊNCIA AMAZÔNIA
contato@agenciaamazonia.com.br

www.agenciaamazonia.com.br

24/06/2011
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Vague de violences meurtrières sur fond de conflit agraire en Amazonie

Ces trois dernières semaines, six paysans et écologistes ont été tués dans l’Etat brésilien du Para. Les funérailles de l’un d’entres eux ont eu lieu hier en présence d’une foule immense.

Les Sans Terre comme ils s’appellent en ont profité pour exiger plus de sécurité de la part du gouvernement de Dilma Rousseff. Ils accusent les grands propriétaires terriens et les industriels d‘être les commanditaires de ces meurtres pour récupérer les terres des petits paysans, le plus souvent avec une impunité totale.

Greenpeace les soutient et demande aussi plus de policiers :

“Malheureusement, le gouvernement n’a pas pris les mesures appropriées. Au contraire, il a contribué à envoyer des signaux qui ont provoqué une augmentation des crimes en Amazonie, car au lieu de punir les responsables de ces meurtres et ceux responsables de la déforestation, le gouvernement reconnaît le vol de terres. En 2008, le gouvernement a légalement reconnu l’invasion de 66 millions d’hectares, c’est l‘équivalent de la superficie réunie de deux pays européens, la France et l’Allemagne”.

Selon la Commission pastorale de la Terre proche de l’Eglise catholique, au moins 125 agriculteurs-écologistes sont menacés de mort en raison de leur lutte contre la déforestation.

Ces crimes interviennent au moment où le parlement débat de l’assouplissement controversé du code forestier défendu par le puissant lobby agricole.

Copyright © 2011  voir la video voir la video sur euronews

06/06/2011
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Brazilian Amazon activist and wife ambushed and killed

A prominent Brazilian conservationist and his wife have been killed in the Amazon region, police have said.

They said Joao Claudio Ribeiro da Silva and Maria do Espirito Santo were ambushed in Para state, near the city of Maraba.

The environmentalist had repeatedly warned of death threats against him by loggers and cattle ranchers.

News of the killings came hours before Brazil's Chamber of Deputies passed a law that eases deforestation rules.

The government has ordered an immediate investigation and promised to catch those responsible for the deaths of Mr Da Silva and his wife.

The bodies of the couple were found inside the nature reserve, Praialta-Piranheira, where they had been working for the past 24 years.

According to family and friends, the pair had been subjected to numerous threats in the past two years for their environmental activism.

They made a living with eco-friendly cultivation of nuts, fruit and rubber.

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Environmental amnesty

News of the deaths came just hours before Brazil's Chamber of Deputies voted on changes to the existing Forest Code.

The legislation, first enacted in 1934 and subsequently amended in 1965, sets out how many trees farmers can cut down.

Regulations currently require that 80% of a landholding in the Amazon remain forest, 20% in other areas.

The new bill, which now needs approval from the Senate and President Dilma Rousseff, reduces the amount of land farmers must keep as forest.

Other changes include some amnesties for those who have illegally cleared land in the past.

Proponents of change argued that the law impeded economic development and said that Brazil had to open more land for agriculture.

Opponents described the legislation as a "disaster".

"It heightens the risk of deforestation, water depletion and erosion," Paulo Gustavo Prado from Conservation International-Brazil told Reuters

 

BBC NEWS

06/06/2011
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Brazil: Amazon rainforest deforestation rises sharply

Deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon rainforest has increased almost sixfold, new data suggests.

Satellite images show deforestation increased from 103 sq km in March and April 2010 to 593 sq km (229 sq miles) in the same period of 2011, Brazil's space research institute says.

Much of the destruction has been in Mato Grosso state, the centre of soya farming in Brazil.
The news comes shortly before a vote on new forest protection rules.
Brazilian Environment Minister Izabella Teixeira said the figures were "alarming" and announced the setting up of a "crisis cabinet" in response to the news.
"Our objective is to reduce deforestation by July," the minister told a news conference.
Analysts say the new figures have taken the government by surprise.
Last December, a government report said deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon had fallen to its lowest rate for 22 years.
However, the latest data shows a 27% jump in deforestation from August 2010 to April 2011.
The biggest rise was in Mato Grosso, which produces more than a quarter of Brazil's soybean harvest.
Some environmentalists argue that rising demand for soy and cattle is prompting farmers to clear more of their land.
But others see a direct link between the jump in deforestation and months of debate over easing an existing law on forest protection.

"You have 300-400 lawmakers here in Brasilia sending the message that profiting from deforestation will be amnestied, that crime pays," Marcio Astrini from Greenpeace told Reuters.

"The only relevant factor is the Forest Code. It is a gigantic rise."


 

The Chamber of Deputies has delayed voting on the Forest Code amid at times acrimonious argument but could consider the issue again next week.The Forest Code, enacted in 1934 and subsequently amended in 1965, sets out how much of his land a farmer can deforest.Regulations currently require that 80% of a landholding in the Amazon remain forest, 20% in other areas.Proponents of change say the law impedes economic development and contend that Brazil must open more land for agriculture.However, opponents fear that in their current form some of the proposed changes might give farmers a form of amnesty for deforested land.The changes were put forward by Aldo Rebelo, leader of Brazil's Communist Party (PCdoB) and backed by a group in Congress known as the "ruralists" who want Brazil to develop its agribusiness sector.

06/06/2011
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Brazil’s Amazon rainforest farmers debate new land law

 

he ceiling fans spinning at full speed were not enough to cool the room, but the farmers gathered in Irituia's town hall are used to the oppressive heat of the Amazon.

Most of the plastic seats were empty but the 30 or so people at the meeting in Irituia were paying a lot of attention to discussions about environmentally sound agriculture in their biodiverse part of the world.

"We are not many yet but we notice that little by little more of us are realising that sustainable farming is the only way to go, and that we don't have to be enemies of the environmentalists," said Mauro Lucio Costa, chairman of the Farmer's Union of Paragominas.


But since then sawmills have been closed and farms more strictly monitored.Paragominas, like Irituia located in the state of Para, topped the deforestation ranking in Brazil in 2008 – and went on a government blacklist.

"It's useless nowadays to cut the trees at night or away from the roads to get away with deforestation because now they are watching us with satellites. I tried that not to long ago and was heavily fined," one farmer told the meeting.

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Opposing priorities

But farmers who have tried to adopt a more environmental approach get more raised eyebrows than approving nods here, especially as tensions were heightened by the debate in Congress over changes to Brazil's Forest Code.

Start Quote

[Environmentalists] want to rip Brazilian farmers out of the ground as if we were some kind poisonous weed”

Katia AbreuNational Agricultural Confederation

This environmental law stipulates that landowners in the Amazon must keep 80% of their terrain forested; that drops to 20% for other parts of Brazil.

Proposals to change the legislation pitted those who see development and economic growth as the highest priority (including many farmers, though not all) against those who see conservation as the key issue. That group includes environmentalists and a large part of the scientific community.

"These NGOs are an international mafia that hold businesses as hostages by threatening to soil the names of those who oppose [them]. These groups thrive when there's conflict," says Katia Abreu, head of Brazil's powerful National Agriculture Confederation (CNA).

"They want to rip Brazilian farmers out of the ground as if we were some kind poisonous weed."

Pressure

The reform of Brazil's Forest Code has been debated for more than 15 years.

Just a few weeks ago it seemed that a version of the bill that eases restrictions on the use of forest land would be approved by the Chamber of Deputies.


Farmer Percio Barros de Lima says he has boosted production without clearing more land

But environmentalists managed to garner more political and public support to bring the vote to a halt.

"Even though the Forest Code has been under intense discussion for many years it was only recently, after it was approved in congressional committees, that the media took an interest in it," says Paulo Adario, co-ordinator for Greenpeace's Amazon programme.

"I think the pressure from national and international public opinion was essential to stop the approval of the bill the way the farmers wanted it and to get President [Dilma] Rousseff's government to support some of our concerns," said Mr Adario.

Farmer Percio Barros de Lima

Among the proposed changes that worried environmentalists were plans to:

  • exempt small landowners from requirement to preserve 80% forest
  • give an amnesty to landowners who cleared forest before 2008
  • reduce the strip of land that must be left intact along the banks of rivers and streams from 30m (100ft) to 15m (50ft)

The proposals were the focus of intense wrangling. On 24 May, deputies approved the overhaul of the forest code. It now goes to the Senate and President Rousseff for approval.



Environmentalists argue that the changes and loopholes in the legislation pose a big threat to the Amazon rainforest.

"The farmers are trying to leave doors open to allow for the permanence of plantations in highly sensitive areas like slopes and hilltops," says Paulo Barreto, a researcher at of the Amazon Institute for Mankind and the Environment (Imazon).

Many environmentalists believe that a recent reported increase in Amazon deforestation was caused by farmers trying to clear land before the new Forest Code code is approved.

This would mean that their lands could be recognised as established farmland.

Corn in the foreground, forest in the background
Demand from abroad has fuelled the expansion of Brazil's agriculture


Productivity

But Mrs Abreu argues that the environmentalists' concerns have more to do with ideology than with science.

"Just look at the world's history and you'll see that everywhere agriculture developed along the rivers because our activity depends on water, it's quite obvious," she said.

Mrs Abreu was critical of the Brazilian Society for the Progress of Science (SBPC), which has called for more for more research before the forest code is changed.



That view, Mrs Abreu said, was "highly politicised".

Environmentalists say that they understand the need for more food production.

But they argue this can be done by increasing the productivity of existing farmland, not clearing more of the Amazon.

Cattle farms in the Amazon have an average productivity of less than one head per hectare (2.5 acres).

"I have invested in better varieties of pasture and in fertilisers and I have an average of 2.5 cows per hectare in my farm. I also plant corn," says farmer Percio Barros de Lima.

"When I bought this farm in 1974 it still had about half of its area covered with original forest, which was what the law required at the time. Since then we have managed to develop by increasing productivity and without clearing any new areas," says Mr Lima.

"I hope the new forest code will make all rules for our activity clearer so we'll be able to work without so many uncertainties about the future."

Cow on cleared land

Decisions in Brasilia will have a big impact on the Amazon

 

BBC NEWS

07/02/2011
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Une tribu amazonienne isolée filmée pour la première fois

 

Le scénario pourrait faire penser à un remake d’Avatar, le film de James Cameron au succès planétaire. Une tribu d’indiens isolés, chassé par les forestiers illégaux du Pérou font route vers le Brésil, dans la région de la rivière Envira, près de la frontière entre les deux pays. Cette branche qui ferait partie de la tribu Mashco-Piro fuit le danger que représentent les exploitants.

source: Survival

14/09/2010
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Celebrating the Heroes of Google Earth Chief Almir and Surui tribe

 Celebrating the Heroes of Google Earth Chief Almir and Surui tribe Google is thrilled to know that hundreds of millions of people use Google Earth to discover, explore, and learn more about the world around them. However, Google is especially proud of the fact that Google Earth has been used as a tool to help people change the world. To celebrate the individuals and organizations that have used Google Earth in their efforts to affect change, Google launches the Google Earth heroes project. The project highligts the work of five organizations with this launch, with several other profiles soon to follow.