Brazil Leads The World In Reducing Carbon Emissions By Slashing Deforestation

IMG_1026
Brazilian coastal forest, Itacaré. Photograph: © SAF — Coastal Care

Excerpts;

Brazil’s success in slowing rain forest destruction has resulted in enormous reductions in carbon emissions and shows that it’s possible to zealously promote sustainability while still growing the economy, suggests a new study out Thursday in Science…

Read Full Article, National Geographic

Read Full Article, EurekaAlert
As the world turns its attention to Brazil with the opening of the World Cup this month, many people around the globe know the country’s soccer fame, but few realize that it is the world’s leader in reducing carbon emissions. A new study published in Science magazine provides the first in-depth analysis of how Brazil reached this global-leader status and managed to increase its agriculture production at the same time…

Saving trees in tropics could cut emissions by one-fifth, study shows, Science Daily
Reducing deforestation in the tropics would significantly cut the amount of carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere — by as much as one-fifth — research shows. In the first study of its kind, scientists have calculated the amount of carbon absorbed by the world’s tropical forests and the amounts of greenhouse gas emissions created by loss of trees, as a result of human activity…

A Giant Brought to Its Knees: The Atlantic Coastal Forest
The Atlantic Forest is a shadow of its former self. Originally covering more than 386,000 sq. miles along Brazil’s coast, extending into eastern Paraguay and northeastern Argentina. Today less than 7% of that cover remains, in the wake of centuries of forest clearing for agriculture and urban development, and fragmented by centuries of unsustainable use and logging…

Global Forest Watch: Dynamic New Platform to Protect Forests Worldwide, World Resources Institute (02-21-2014)
A new website, Global Forest Watch, will allow governments, businesses, civil society and private citizens to monitor near real-time loss and gain in forest cover in every country around the world.

The Sumatran rainforest will mostly disappear within 20 years (05-26-2013)

Haiti’s Unnatural Floods
The nearly complete deforestation of Haiti has caused countless problems for the country, the people, and its biodiversity…

Saving Fiji’s Coral Reefs Linked to Forest Conservation Upstream, Wildlife Conservation Society (12-18-2013)
The health of coral reefs offshore depend on the protection of forests near the sea, according to a new study by the Wildlife Conservation Society that outlines the importance of terrestrial protected areas to coastal biodiversity…

Influence of Deforestation, Logging, and Fire on Malaria in the Brazilian Amazon, PLos One

Latest Posts + Popular Topics