Google – AFP, 14 November 2013
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The
deforestation area stops at the border of Indio's reservation area in Para
state, northern Brazil, on August 9, 2013 (AFP/File, Yasuyoshi Chiba)
|
Brasília —
Deforestation in Brazil's Amazon region rose 28 percent over the past year,
Environment Minister Izabella Teixeira said Thursday, announcing she was
calling an emergency meeting to try to remedy the situation.
"We
confirm a 28-percent increase in the rate of deforestation, reaching 5,843
square kilometers (2256 square miles)," Teixeira told a press conference,
citing provisional statistics for August 2012 through July this year.
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Izabella
Teixeira, Brazil's Minister of
Environment, speaks at a press
conference on
September 18, 2013 at
The Museum of Natural History in
New York (AFP/File, Stan
Honda)
|
Teixeira
said she would meet with Amazon regional environment secretaries of state next
week to demand explanations and measures to deal with the situation on her
return from a UN climate change summit in Warsaw.
She also
criticized the apparent ineffectiveness of monitoring by federal state
authorities.
"The
Brazilian government does not tolerate and does not accept any rise in illegal
deforestation," the minister said, insisting Brasilia is firmly committed
to drastically reducing deforestation.
Although
large in percentage terms, the rise in absolute terms is the second smallest in
recent years as 2012 saw 4,571 square kilometers of deforestation, following an
even more disturbing 6,418 square kilometers in 2011.
The worst
year on record was 2004, when 27,000 square kilometers of forest was lost.
Global
agricultural production giant Brazil is caught between environmental pressures
and the interests of large-scale farmers.
The
country's forestry code requires landowners in the Amazon to devote 80 percent
to native forests. But enforcement has been lax.
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