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Taking root? Tree-planting new trend in eco-conscious Davos
by Staff Writers
Davos, Switzerland (AFP) Jan 21, 2020

Brazil's Bolsonaro creates 'Amazon Council' to protect forest
Bras�lia (AFP) Jan 21, 2020 - Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said Tuesday he will create an "Amazon Council" to coordinate the protection and sustainable development of the world's largest rainforest.

Bolsonaro, who has faced a firestorm of criticism for his environmental policies since taking power in January 2019, presided over a surge in deforestation in the Amazon last year.

The council will be led by Vice President Hamilton Mourao, Bolsonaro said on Twitter.

It will be tasked with coordinating the "various actions in each ministry concerned with the protection, defense and sustainable development of the Amazon," he added.

A National Environmental Force charged with protecting the rainforest will also be established, Bolsonaro said.

The announcements come as Bolsonaro pushes for the legalization of mining and farming in indigenous territory.

A bill is expected to be sent to Congress soon. Indigenous leaders said last week the plan was tantamount to "genocide."

Deforestation in the Amazon soared 85 percent in 2019 compared with a year earlier, official figures show.

It's a green policy that everyone can get behind.

In Davos this year, leaders and tycoons, including the world's leading climate sceptic Donald Trump, offered to plant trees to help the planet.

Finding common ground on global warming was no small accomplishment on the first day of this year's World Economic Forum that was dominated by speeches by Trump and teenage climate warrior, Greta Thurnberg.

The most obvious example of the new found tree love was from Zurich Insurance, which every year hands out box-loads of blue ski bonnets to any Davos-goers foolish enough to come to the snow-cloaked fest without a hat.

But this year the insurance giant innovated, promising to plant a tree for every winter hat offered. On Tuesday afternoon in this Swiss ski resort, the meter read 5,250.

Some of the world's most powerful CEOs take planting trees incredibly seriously.

"We are facing a planetary climate crisis and trees are one of the most effective ways to sequester carbon and stop the worst effects of climate change," cloud giant Salesforce chairman Marc Benioff said in Davos.

A Davos regular, Benioff helps on the trillion tree campaign, a major reforestation project launched by WEF that Trump in his speech said he would back.

Chinese Vice Premier Han Zheng spoke of his country's "high-value" reforestation programme and said Beijing was "willing to share its experience with other countries."

Environmentalists view corporate tree-hugging with suspicion.

"We are not telling you to 'offset your emission' by just paying someone else to plant trees in places like Africa while at the same time forests like the Amazon are being slaughtered at an infinitely higher rate," Thurnberg told her Davos audience.

"Planting trees is good, of course, but it's nowhere near enough of what needs to be done, and it cannot replace real mitigation or rewilding nature," she said.

The executive director of Greenpeace International, Jennifer Morgan, also stressed that trees are not compensation for pollution.

"We need to change our industrial agriculture system, we need to absorb a massive amount of CO2 in order to have a chance of avoiding true catastrophe. But the idea of planting trees to potentially compensate the continued pollution from fossile fuels, emissions from fossil fuels, it's just not credible," Morgan told AFP.

"The fact that the Forum has put something forward as planting trees rather than reducing the problem just shows how out of touch (they are), how much they are not internalising what it means to leave a sustainable and liveable society for their kids," she added.

Many of the companies represented in Davos, such as the oil giants Shell and Total, long ago launched carbon offset projects through tree planting, and the scheme is also being implemented by airlines.

Some experts, however, cautioned against the use of fast-growing species such as eucalyptus or pine, which could disrupt local ecosystems.

aue/arp/sjw/boc

SALESFORCE.COM

TOTAL

ROYAL DUTCH SHELL PLC

ZURICH INSURANCE GROUP


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WOOD PILE
Amazon indigenous leaders accuse Brazil of 'genocide' policy
Piaracu, Brazil (AFP) Jan 18, 2020
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro's pledge to open up the Amazon to mining companies was tantamount to "genocide", indigenous leaders said Friday at a meeting to oppose the government's environmental policies. Hundreds of elders gathered this week at Pairacu, deep in the rainforest, to form a united front against Bolsonaro's environmental policies, which have seen deforestation in the jungle nearly double since the Brazilian leader came to power a year ago. "Our aim was to join forces and deno ... read more

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Taking root? Tree-planting new trend in eco-conscious Davos

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