Amazon Basin
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Area | 75 |
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Did you know | The tropical Amazon Basin includes the Amazon River and surrounding areas, in South America, and it drains large volumes of water into the Atlantic Ocean. |
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ID | 1127729 |
About Amazon Basin
The Amazon Basin is the part of South America drained by the Amazon River and its tributaries. The Amazon drainage basin covers an area of about 6,300,000 km², or about 35. 5 percent that of the South American continent.
Amazon rainforest: Deforestation rate continues to fall
... Last month, President Lula hosted leaders from the eight countries that share the Amazon Basin at a summit in the city of Belém...
Amazon nations fall short of agreed goal to end deforestation
...By Christy Cooney in London & Katy Watson in Belém, BrazilBBC NewsThe eight countries that share the Amazon Basin have fallen short of an agreed goal to end deforestation...
Drought robs Amazon communities of 'life-giving' river
... Such low water levels pose an existential threat to the estimated 30 million people that call the Amazon Basin home, including Mr Rufino s indigenous Ticuna people...
COP26: World leaders promise to end deforestation by 2030
... Tuntiak Katan, coordinator of the Coordination of Indigenous Communities of the Amazon Basin, welcomed the deal telling BBC News that indigenous communities are on the frontline of stopping deforestation...
Deforested parts of the Amazon, emit more CO2 than they absorb'
... results from a decade-long study of greenhouse gases over the Amazon Basin appear to show about 20% of the entire area has become a net source of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere...
World 'losing battle against deforestation'
... Globally, net deforestation continues apace Tropical forest loss accounts for more than 90% of global deforestation, with the hotspot being located in Amazon Basin nations of Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia and Peru...
Are fires in the Amazon and elsewhere getting worse?
... There is a similar pattern for other areas of Brazilian forestry that are not part of the Amazon Basin...
Amazon fires: Brazil governors push Bolsonaro to accept aid
...South American countries will meet to discuss a coordinated response to the fires ravaging the Amazon Basin next week, Brazil s President Jair Bolsonaro has announced...
Amazon fires: Brazil governors push Bolsonaro to accept aid
South American countries will meet to discuss a coordinated response to the fires ravaging the Amazon Basin next week, Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has announced.
It Comes after he refused a G7 offer of $22m (£18m) Following a spat with French President Emmanuel Macron .
Governors of The Nine worst affected regions have urged him to reconsider.
Mr Bolsonaro has now accepted Chile's offer of four planes to fight the fires, The Most in Brazil since 2010.
He revealed all countries in the Amazon region, apart from Venezuela, will meet on 6 September to further discuss a common policy.
However, speaking after meeting his Chilean counterpart Sebastian Pinera , Mr Bolsonaro said he was not yet prepared to accept the G7 offer.
"The French government called me a Liar ," he said, according to Reuters news agency. "Only after it has recanted what it said about me. . and the Brazilian people, who do not accept this diminution of the Amazon's sovereignty. . then we can talk again. "
Why does it matter?The Amazon is a vital carbon store That slows down the pace of Global Warming .
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As international concern over the fires spread, leaders of the seven leading industrial nations meeting in France offered $22m to help fight the fires.
President Macron, who was hosting The Summit , said the funds would be made available immediately - primarily to pay for more firefighting planes.
But President Bolsonaro rejected the offer arguing That the G7 countries were treating Brazil like "A Colony or a no-man's land".
Will Brazil take the G7 aid now?That is not entirely clear yet. There has been a lot of back and forth on this.
After ruling out accepting the aid, President Bolsonaro softened his stance a little on Tuesday saying he would consider doing so, if President Macron apologised for insulting him by calling him a Liar - words he echoed on Wednesday.
Altamira is one of the areas most devastated by the firesAnd Following President Bolsonaro's meeting with the governors late on Tuesday, presidential spokesman Rego Barros said the Brazilian government "is open to receiving financial support from organisations and countries".
However, Mr Barros stipulated That the aid would have to have the "total governance of the Brazilian people". There has been no response yet from the French government or the G7 countries.
The Governor of Maranhão State , Flávio Dino , said he and his counterparts from other affected states had told Mr Bolsonaro That "it's not the moment to turn down money".
What other aid has been pledged?Apart from the $22m the G7 countries offered,
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US President.
Reuters news agency says it has been told by a diplomatic source in Brasilia That the Brazilian government has accepted $12. 2m from the UK government.
What is Brazil doing to stop the fires?The government says it has deployed 44,000 soldiers to seven states to combat the fires.
Firefighters and soldiers have been deployed But the area affected is hugeProsecutors are also investigating allegations That some of the fires were trigged by The Illegal clearing of land.
The justice ministry says That Federal Police officers would be sent to The Fire zones to assist other State agencies in combating "illegal deforestation".
Are there more fires than in recent years?suggests there are. The Agency , known as Inpe, says there have been More Than 83,000 fires between 1 January 2019 and 27 August 2019. That is a 77% rise compared to the same period in 2018.
That the "2019 fires season has the highest fire count since 2012 ".
That The High number of fires being recorded coincides with a sharp drop in fines being handed out for environmental violations.
What are people on the ground saying?Jorgimar Alberto, from Roraima, one of The States most affected by the fires, has seen The Burning of most of The Land surrounding his wooden house.
"It's a risky situation, we have lots of crops here and everything is burning, such as the cashew trees," he told the BBC.
"I even had to keep The Animals [inside] so That they don't burn as well. Every year it is the same, these fires are disturbing the region a lot. "
Environmental officials helped him extinguish the fires last week only for them to reignite, he said.
His wife could not stand staying in the house with the smell of burning and The Threat getting ever closer, so she left.
Jorgimar AlbertoDr Daniel Pires, meanwhile, told Brazil's Folha de S. Paulo newspaper That The Number of children he had seen with respiratory problems since the early part of the month had doubled.
"This period has been very tough. The Dry weather and The Smoke causes many problems for children, such as pneumonia, coughing and secretion," the paediatrician, who works at Cosme e Damia Children's hospital in the Rondonia State capital of Porto Velho, said.
But lumberyard owner Edson Oliveira from southern Amazonas said he did not believe the media coverage about the Amazon.
"In my opinion, the parts That are burning are the same That burn every year," he told the BBC.
Asked what he would like politicians to do for the Amazon, he said That he would like "economic alternatives for people here, to find a way we can make use of The Natural wealth we have here".
"It's no use pointing the finger at what's wrong without bringing alternatives to people," he said.
brazil, emmanuel macron, amazon fires, jair bolsonaro
Source of news: bbc.com