MINISTRY OF THE ENVIRONMENT LAUNCHES BOOK ON ANTARCTICA


Environmental Panorama
International
April of 2009


Picture a 30 million-year-old air-conditioning system strong enough to cool the whole world. Capable of adjusting global temperatures, the Earth's southernmost continent, Antarctica, is focused in a new book launched by the Brazilian Ministry of the Environment on April 1, in Brasília. "Antárctica - Bem Comum da Humanidade" was compiled by the Brazilian Antarctic Program (Proantar) and offers simple explanations for many of the mysteries of the Antarctic continent - a true no-man's-land open to international research but protected since 1998 by the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty (the "Madrid Protocol"), which calls it a "natural reserve devoted to peace and science".

The Antarctic continent is a 14-million-square-kilometre (the size of 16 brazils) piece of land, 98% covered in ice, where the Sun never sets and where temperatures have been known to plummet to -89 °C, under winds capable of blowing at 375 km/h.

The idea of the book is to share knowledge gathered over more than 50 years of research in Antarctica - half of them also carried out by Brazil in its King George Island station, situated 120 kilometers off the coast of the continent in the Southern Ocean.

The richness of the book's photographs, alone, are enough to justify it - but simple, objective texts also help bring Antarctica's problems to light, a year after the 2007/2008 International Polar Year. The pictures reveal some of the continent's richnesses: a profusion of land and sea animals and a history of archaelogical, climactic, and biological discoveries, amongst many other unique characteristics. On the other hand, the book explains why the continent is increasingly threatened by global warming and other environmental problems.

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Minc wants to ally technology to traditional knowledge in indigenous lands

02/04/2009 - To ally advanced forest management technogies to traditional knowledge so that indigenous populations can live with health and dignity whilst protecting biodiversity: this was the main goal of an intercultural dialogue which occurred this week (May 31, April 1), in Brasília, during the seminar "Gestão Ambiental em Terras Indígenas" ("Environmental Management in Indigenous Lands"). Brazilian minister of the Environment Carlos Minc said, at the opening of the seminar, that bringing this knowledge together is extremely important - and that the government is the most responsible for protecting areas situated around indigenous lands.

"Modern territorial and forest management methods are also applicable to indigenous peoples. First of all, however, we must join forces to preserve areas that surround indigenous lands - because farms are getting closer and closer and often contaminate rivers, provoke an accumulation of soil in riverbeds and thus reduce their depth. We want to create conservation units surrounding these lands so as to make a kind of protective wall which diminishes these impacts."

During his speech to over 100 people - such as indigenous leaders, government technicians and NGO representatives -, Minc was applauded when he congratulated the Brazilian Supreme Federal Court (STF) for its "historic decision" on March 19 to maintain Raposa Serra do Sol indigenous reserve (in the state of Roraima) as a continuous territory. He also mentioned an article recently published in Folha de S. Paulo newspaper: according to research, Brazil is the Amazonian country which least protects its forest with indigenous reserves and conservation units. (The other Amazonian countries are Peru, Venezuela, Colombia, Bolivia, Ecuador and Guyana.)

"From now on I will carry this study with me: it will help when I speak to president Lula about establishing new indigenous lands, extractivist reserves and national parks - the latter for biodiversity protection, research and ecotourism."

According to the president of the Brazilian National Indigenous Foundation (Fundação Nacional do Índio/Funai), also present at the seminar, "we must deal with the future of indigenous peoples and their lands in Brazil". He added that biodiversity is much more protected insided official indigenous lands.

To terena indian Joãozinho da Silva, a Funai manager in Campo Grande (state of Mato Grosso do Sul/MS), Limão Verde reserve in Aquidauana (MS) is a good example of this fact: the reserve suffered serious degradation before expropriation and regulation in the beginning of the 11000s. Presently, however, vegetation is almost completely restored and the reserve's indigenous population has begun to healthily expand. Terenas, guaranis and kaiowás in Jaguapiru reserve in Dourados (MS), on the other hand - pressured both by soy farms and urban expasion -, face a degradingly different situation.

 
 

Source: Brazil - Ministry for the Environment
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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