No man’s land in the Brazilian Amazon: Could undesignated public forests slow Amazon deforestation?

20 de abril de 2018

abr 20, 2018

Claudia Azevedo-Ramos, Paulo Moutinho

Here we argue that a faster and more cost-effective way to reduce deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon would be the immediate allocation of ca. 70 million hectares of still undesignated public forestlands to conservation and social use. Currently, this massive block of forests is not under effective supervision by a designated public agency, increasing the risk of continued land grabbing and predatory use. These undesignated public lands accounted for 25% of recent deforestation, emitting 200 million tons of CO2.

Under the current scenario of deforestation growth in the region, the immediate allocation of undesignated forestlands to conservation or social use by the government will reduce the availability of unsupervised public land, increase forest protection and, therefore, decrease deforestation and carbon emissions. Additionally, the action would send an unmistakable sign to the international community of Brazil’s will to increase governance of its large share of the Amazon forest.

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Fortalecendo a gestão ambiental municipal – Mecanismos financeiros e visibilização de boas práticas

Fortalecendo a gestão ambiental municipal – Mecanismos financeiros e visibilização de boas práticas

Tendo em vista que as gestões municipais frequentemente possuem escassos recursos humanos, econômicos, estruturais e informacionais para fazer frente a todas essas responsabilidades, essa cartilha busca contribuir para superação desses desafios, especialmente no que se relaciona a captação de recursos para a área ambiental. Essa publicação é resultado de um estudo realizado pelo Instituto de Pesquisas Ambientais da Amazônia (IPAM) em parceria com o Centro de Estudos em Administração Pública e Governo da Escola de Administração de Empresas de São Paulo da Fundação Getúlio Vargas (CEAPG-FGV).

A Pathway to Zero Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon (executive summary)

A Pathway to Zero Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon (executive summary)

The document indicates the possible ways to end deforestation in the region, with environmental, economic and social benefits for the country. Prepared by the Zero Deforestation Working Group - composed of experts from the organizations Greenpeace Brazil, ICV, Imaflora, Imazon, IPAM, Instituto Socioambiental, WWF Brazil and TNC Brazil -, it has the most current scientific literature on forests, climate and agriculture. In the following sections, the main reasons why ZD is, more than possible, an inescapable need.