|
Amazon Body Care |
|
|
Who's Online |
|
We have 150 guests online |
|
Statistics |
Members: 494
News: 11474
Web Links: 0
|
|
Related Items |
-
Brazil: Army Joins War Against Deforestation
-
A Brazilian Pledge: Lasting War on Deforestation
-
Brazil to Replant Forests as Fast as It Cuts Them
-
US to Help Fight Forest Fires in Brazil
-
Brazil Might Lose Its Savannah in 20 Years
-
Brazil to Teach Rural Workers How to Care for Forest
-
Brazil Is Burning: 1 Million Fires Raging
-
Brazil Wants Kyoto to Protect Forests
-
Forest Burning Is Brazil's Contribution to Greenhouse Effect
-
For Brazil, Amazon is for All to Use and to Help
-
Soybean Accelerates Brazil's Deforestation
-
Brazil Opens Amazon for Logging and Greenpeace Applauds
-
Wood from Forest Reserve Confiscated in Brazil
-
Brazil Trusts Private Sector Can Keep Forests Alive
-
Alcohol Makes Brazil Environment Friendly
-
Brazil Doubles Amazon Research Funds to US$ 57 Million
-
Brazil's Timber Blocked by Greenpeace in Portugal
-
Brazil Amazon's Wood Exports Jump to US$ 1 Billion
-
Brazil Reserves 13 Million Hectares of Amazon for Sustainable Use
-
41 Countries Discuss in Brazil How to Reforest
-
Brazil Uses Satellite to Track Amazon Deforestation
-
Brazil Opposes International Accord on Forests
-
Amazon Deforestation in Brazil Back to Alarming Level
-
Inspection Not Enough to Stop Amazon Deforestation, Says Brazil Minister
-
Greenpeace Calls Deforestation in Brazil a National Shame
-
Lula Has Foreign Accomplices in the Destruction of the Amazon
-
Golden Chainsaw for Lula and Other Enemies of Brazil's Amazon
-
Amazon Deforestation Is to Blame for 75% of Brazil's Air Pollution
-
Brazil: New Focus Helps Amazonas Reduce Deforestation by 39%
-
Soy Interests in Brazil Make Demarcation of Indian Land Difficult
-
After Amazon Gang Arrest, Brazil Expects Reduction in Deforestation
-
Brazil to Use Deforested Areas for Sustainable Development Programs
-
Brazil: UN Has Project to Rescue the Amazon
-
Now, Brazil Wants Zero Deforestation
-
Cattle Raising Is Making Brazil's Reserve into a Huge Grazing Land
-
Brazilian Ministers Tell Their Vision of a Sustainable Amazon
-
Brazil: Local Populations in the Amazon Start Large-Scale Timber Management
-
FAO's Map Is Not Pretty Picture for Brazil and the Amazon
-
Deforestation Is to Blame for Brazil Amazon's Drought, Says Greenpeace
-
Forest Loss in the Amazon Should Be Double of What Was Reported
-
Brazil and South America Lead Planet's Deforestation
-
Brazil's Industrial Park Committed to Ban Illegal Amazon Timber
-
90% of Amazon Timber Is Illegal and Brazil Buys Most of It
-
Crack Down Works. Brazil Cuts Amazon Deforestation by 30%.
-
Brazil Reduces Amazon Deforestation for the First Time in 9 Years
-
Brazilian Associations Get Help on Obtaining Green Seal
-
Joint Effort and Fines Helped Reduce Brazil's Deforestation by 31%, Says Minister
-
Brazil's Deforestation Drops, But It Is Still Impressive
-
Deforestation Declines Over 30% in Brazil, But Loggers Open New Fronts
-
Not Since the Dinosaurs Demise Species Had It So Bad, Say Experts in Brazil
-
Three US Multinationals Ares Eating the Amazon, Says Greenpeace
-
McDonald's Vows to Investigate Charges that It Is Destroying Brazil's Amazon
-
Brazilian Minister Envisions Doubling Amazon Production Without Deforestation
-
Brazil's Petrobras Has Big Plans to Take on the World
-
Multinationals Boycott Soy from Brazil's Deforested Amazon
-
Pasture Gives Way to Cropland in Brazilian Amazon's Deforestation
-
Brazil Court Shuts Down US Soy Giant Cargill for Destroying Amazon
-
Less Profit to Cut Brazilian Amazon Reduces Deforestation by 1/3
-
Brazil Needs Help of the Rich to Stop Amazon's Destruction
-
Brazil Cuts a Rhode Island Worth of Amazon or Much More in 3 Months
-
Brazilian Senate Starts Enquiry on Foreign Ownership of Amazon
-
Brazil's Deforestation Falls 20%, But It's Up 6% in Protected Areas
-
Brazil's Forest Monitoring Know-How May Be Used in Africa
-
Amazon Burns a New York City of Trees in a Month. A 20% Reduction, Brazil Says
-
Brazil Wants the World to Chip In to a US$ 23 Billion Amazon Protection Fund
-
Brazilian Farmers Get Paid for Reforesting
-
Brazil Has a Plan to Cut Deforestation by 70% in a Decade
-
In Brazil While Some Cut Deforestation Others Cut More of the Amazon
-
Only Zero Deforestation Can Save Brazil's Rainforest
-
Brazilian Door and Plywood Sheet Maker Bets on Exporting
-
Greenpeace Gets Commitment that Will Slow Down Brazilian Amazon's Deforestation
-
Deforestation Down in Amazon, Says Brazil. Photos Tell Another Story
-
Brazil to Profit Up to US$ 16 Billion from New Global Emissions Reduction
-
Brazil Cuts Half New York in Amazon Trees in a Month, And It's a Record Low
-
Brazil Says Amazon Deforestation Reached 20 Year Low
|
|
Contribution |
| Have you got news? Do you have news, comment or story on Brazil you want to share with Brazzil? Just send it our way to brazzil@brazzil.com. | |
|
|
|
The Latest from Brazzil Magazine |
|
|
|
|
One City at a Time. A Greenpeace Plan to Lower Brazil's Illegal Deforestation. |
|
|
|
|
Written by Érica Sato
|
|
Monday, 14 November 2005 |
|
Greenpeace is getting municipal governments to sign agreements for the implantation of the Cities Friends of the Amazon project, which is intended to diminish illegal deforestation by focusing on buyers, the final link in the supply chain.
According to the coordinator of the project, Adriana Imparato, Greenpeace estimates indicate that a third of all the timber consumed in Brazil is consumed by the State machine. "The chief objective of the program is to get municipal governments to adopt a model of sustainable timber purchases, because at present a large portion of the municipal governments in our country consumes illegal timber that is the fruit of deforestation," Imparato said. According to Imparato, this occurs because the only document required for timber purchases is the sales receipt, which does not state the origin of the timber. Therefore, regardless of how effective the inspection may be, there is no way to prove that the timber comes from an illegally deforested area without a document registering its origin. Imparato explained that the idea is for each one of the municipal administrations to pass a law regulating direct or indirect purchases of sustainable timber, from forest management plans authorized by the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (Ibama). "Indirect purchases, because, in the case of public works, which are responsible for the lion's share of timber bought by city governments, it is the hired contractor that buys the wood," she observed. Agência Brasil
|
|
|
|
|
Home
|
|
Brazzil Magazine - Since 1989 trying to understand Brazil |
|
|
|
|
|