Brazil Clears 8 Miles of Amazon Rainforest to Make Space for UN Climate Conference
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By Matthew Gault Published March 12, 2025 | Comments (0) | Aerial view of an aca palm plantation in Abaetetuba, Para State, in the Brazilian Amazon Forest, on August 4, 2023. Photo by Evaristo SA / AFP This November, the United Nations will descend on the city of Belm, Brazil in an attempt to solve climate change. The 2025 United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP30, will bring 50,000 people to the city. Brazil cut down portions of the Amazon rainforest to build a four-lane highway and make it just a little easier for those 50,000 people to arrive. As reported by the BBC, the state government of Par cleared out eight miles of Amazon rainforest to build the highway. The BBCs article has pictures of the clear-cut forest floor where logs have been piled up along a stretch of road that will soon hold concrete and passing cars. Forests, in general, and the Amazon Rainforest, in particular, are instrumental in fighting rising global temperatures. Andr Aranha Corra Do Lago, a career Brazilian diplomat who is heading up the COP30, eloquently made the case for forests in a letter he published earlier this week that laid out his vision for the conference, the climate, and the world. When we get together in the Brazilian Amazon in November, we must listen to the latest science and re-evaluate the extraordinary role already played by forests and the people who preserve and rely on them, Do Lago wrote. Local resident Claudio Verequete lives near the highway and previously made a living harvesting aa berries. Those trees are gone now, cut down to make way for the UN Climate Conference. Our fear is that one day someone will come here and say: Heres some money. We need this area to build a gas station, or to build a warehouse. And then well have to leave, he told the BBC.The highway cuts across the forest, cutting off access to animals and people who have lived in the forest for generations. What was once a whole area will soon be two halves blocked by pavement. Verequete told the BBC his village wont even have an onramp to the highway. They will just live abutting its looming noise-blocking walls. Scientists and conservationists, those who know the extraordinary role of the Amazon well, told the BBC they fear the new highway will devastate the local ecology. Par has wanted to build a highway to Belm, a city with more than two million people, since 2012. But environmental protections around the Amazon rainforest have always prevented it. In a perverse twist of fate, the upcoming climate conference has given the state the authority to build infrastructure to support it. And so the Amazon was felled. The highway will be called Avenida Liberdade or Liberty Avenue.Avenida Liberdade is part of a much bigger infrastructure project that Par hopes will revitalize Belm. Its spending $81 million to expand the airport and build a five-million-square-foot park. The city is building multiple hotels, and organizers are planning to sail high-capacity cruise ships into the citys port to house people who cant find room in the hotels. Belm was chosen on purpose. This is the first U.N. climate conference that will be held in the Amazon, an important natural wonder thats instrumental in regulating the planets temperature. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva campaigned on protecting the forest and, early in his tenure, did slow down deforestation. But it hasnt stopped, and Lula has even endorsed projects such as allowing oil companies to do exploratory drilling at the mouth of the Amazon river. Forests can buy us time in climate action in our rapidly closing window of opportunity, Do Lago said in his letter. If we reverse deforestation and recover what has been lost, we can unlock massive removals of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere while bringing ecosystems back to life.Hes right. Too bad his country just cleared eight miles of Amazon Rainforest to make way for the conference hes preparing for in this letter.Daily NewsletterYou May Also Like By Passant Rabie Published March 10, 2025 By Adam Kovac Published March 2, 2025 By Isaac Schultz Published February 14, 2025 By Matt Novak Published February 11, 2025 By Thomas Maxwell Published February 10, 2025 By Ed Cara Published January 31, 2025
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