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Home/ Humanities 2012 Students/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Taikan Ueoka

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Taikan Ueoka

Taikan Ueoka

AMAZON WATCH » Is Brazil Destroying The Amazon For Energy? - 0 views

  • Brazil's first woman president, Dilma Rousseff wants to eliminate more than 86,000 hectares of protected areas in the Amazon
  • The immediate reason? To make way for at least two large hydroelectric dams being worked out on paper, including the Tapajos project – an 8,000 megawatt power station the government would like to see built on the border of Para and Amazonas states.
  • The (Brazilian) President is backtracking on Brazil's environmental commitments, and will use any means necessary to push through an agenda of expensive mega-infrastructure projects in the Amazon
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    The perspective of the presidents
Taikan Ueoka

Tropical Forests PRR - Who benefits from Deforestation and who loses? - 3 views

  • Profits from deforestation range from near zero to thousand of dollars a hectare.In some places, there are huge incentives to convert or degrade forest.In Cameroon, oil palm and intensive cocoa cultivation has a net present value of more than $1,400 a hectare.In Brazil's cerrado, some conversions result in land values over $3,000 a hectare.And India offers very high values for land devoted to coffee cultivation in the Western Ghats, a biodiversity hotspot.
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    This page has some information on how much money can be made out of the rainforest
Taikan Ueoka

http://www.sae.gov.br/site/wp-content/uploads/td_0455.pdf - 0 views

    • Taikan Ueoka
       
      Earning more money and investing on the country's infrastructure seems to be important to the Brazilian government, and data shows that the best development option is to cut down the trees in the amazon rain forest and plant perennial plants for more sustainable logging. 
Taikan Ueoka

Brazilian government faces criminal charges over Amazon deforestation | Environment | g... - 0 views

  • Minc said the environment ministry will bring criminal charges against all of them. The government will also create an environmental police force with 3,000 heavily armed and specially trained officers to help combat illegal deforestion.
    • Taikan Ueoka
       
      The Brazilian government is trying to help stop illegal deforestion
  • Carlos Minc, the Brazilian environment minister, said the upcoming national elections were partly to blame, with mayors in the Amazon region ignoring illegal loggers in the hope of gaining votes locally.
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