The Amazon's crusader, taking on the world
When international climate negotiators convene next month in Copenhagen, Brazilian politician Marina Silva will serve as the conference's unofficial philosopher-activist. A native Amazonian who grew up in a community of rubber-tappers, Silva worked with murdered Amazonian activist Chico Mendes, won the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize in 1996 and served as Brazil's minister of the environment under President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from 2002 to 2008. She spoke with Washington Post environment reporter Juliet Eilperin during a recent visit to Washington; Stephan Schwartzman of the Environmental Defense Fund translated from the Portuguese. Excerpts:
What they would like to do, or what they would feel comfortable to do with the short-term time horizons of their mandates, is not enough.
To what extent do you think avoided deforestation in places like the Amazon can succeed at curbing global warming, given that deforestation accounts for 15 percent of the world's annual greenhouse gas emissions?
For this process to last, to be sustainable over time, we need to change the process of development. It's not enough to say what people can't do. You have to tell them what they can do, how they can do it and provide them with the means to do it. In the case of the Amazon, there are 25 million people living there, and they need alternatives. If there are not alternatives, there will once again be tremendous pressure on the forest. What's needed is a change in the fundamental economics of the Amazon to create sustainable expectations to meet the needs of the people.
How do you view the United States' current work on climate change?
We're enthusiastic about what's going on in the United States, the fact that there's been a law passed by the House of Representatives. The fact that climate-change legislation is on the agenda of the United States is tremendously important. It's a huge change, after being absent from the international negotiations for nearly 10 years, that the United States has returned.
I recognize that the United States not having legislation [passed] in the Senate creates a problem. At the same time, the sentiment of the international community is going to demand that these [industrialized] countries take on a long-term target, an 80 percent reduction in emissions by midcentury. It's important that there's agreement around a long-term target. President Obama and the Congress are beginning a discussion that should have happened 10 years ago. But the fact that it has begun is very promising.
How optimistic are you that the world's nations will take on binding commitments to curb greenhouse gas emissions?
We already have the greater part of the technical responses that we need to address these problems. What we need to do is to put these technical responses and methods at the service of ethics, and take into consideration the fate of future generations.
Do you still live in the Amazon part of the time?
In my mind, I'm always in the Amazon. I just have a job that requires me to work in Brasilia for a certain time. I'm increasingly called upon to travel to other states in Brazil and outside of Brazil, but my reference point is Amazonia; it's the locus from which I enter into dialogue with other regions of Brazil and the outside world. I make a point of returning to the Amazon at least once a month.
What was it like working with Chico Mendes? What might he make of Brazil's and the world's efforts on the environment today?
I worked and lived with Chico Mendes. It was sharing friendship and apprenticeship. It was principally a political apprenticeship, not in the sense of party politics, but the politics of how to relate to different parts of society, in this case the rubber-tappers. Chico Mendes had an enormous capacity for dialogue -- even with those who were against him, who opposed him in the extreme -- and to not let himself be intimidated by the seeming impossibility of dialogue. He didn't allow other people's indifference to influence him. Even if someone was indifferent to his cause, this didn't mean he had to be indifferent to them. I learned that first we should count on relationships, on persuasion rather than conflict, on processes of co-authorship.
With regard to the efforts Brazil and the world have made on environmental issues, if Chico were alive he would agree that they are far beyond the times he experienced, when he had to confront the fury of those who wanted to do the same thing in the Amazon as was done in Brazil's Atlantic forest and other Brazilian biomes. But he would also certainly conclude that these efforts are much less than the planet needs.
via washingtonpost.com
























Monitoramento da Floresta Amazônica Brasileira por Satélite - PRODES
Sistema de Detecção de Desmatamento em Tempo Real - DETER

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