Archive for February, 2011

Isolated Amazon Tribes Threatened by Logging, Groups Say

New York Times: Members of the “uncontacted” Amazon tribe in western Brazil near the Peruvian border. Brazilian officials have released new aerial photographs of a highly isolated tribe living deep in the Amazon rainforest in a bid to draw attention to the threat posed to its existence by illegal logging in neighboring Peru. This is the second time the tribe has been photographed by Brazil`s Indian Affairs department. In 2008, images of tribe members shooting arrows at an airplane quickly circulated the globe...

Somalia faces malnutrition crisis

Guardian: Severe drought in Somalia has left nearly one in three children acutely malnourished in some areas – double the normal emergency threshold – and caused a sharp rise in food prices. An estimated 2.4 million people – about a third of Somalia's population – require humanitarian aid after the failure of recent rains, according to the UN. This figure is up from 2 million six months ago. Though fighting continues in many areas of the country, drought has overtaken insecurity as the main reason for...

Photos of isolated Amazonian tribe raise awareness of deforestation in Brazil, Peru

Christian Science Monitor: An indigenous rights group this week released stunning new photos of a supposedly isolated Amazonian tribe, saying illegal loggers operating near Brazil’s remote eastern border with Peru are threatening their survival. The photos show five almost-naked Panoan Indians covered in natural red dyes, probably from the urucu or annatto plant. Some of them are holding bows and arrows and all appear healthy. The photos were taken by Brazil’s National Indian Foundation (FUNAI) and given to the London-based...

Film About Sinking Island Nominated for Oscar

Daily News: Film About Sinking Island Nominated for Oscar Film About Sinking Island Nominated for Oscar The serious consequences of Earth's changing climate are the subject of a powerful documentary film nominated for an Academy Award, the U.S. film industry's top prize. "Sun Come Up" is the story of the Carteret Islands off the coast of Papua New Guinea, where filmmaker Jennifer Redfearn says Islanders have had no choice but to move to higher ground. "We documented some of the destruction that is happening...

UN chief urges the world to realize full potential of forests

People Daily: Marking the launch of the International Year of Forests, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon Wednesday called on the world to realize the full potential of forests to ensure future prosperity. "By declaring 2011 as the International Year of Forests, the United Nations General Assembly has created an important platform to educate the global community about the great value of forests -- and the extreme social, economic and environmental costs of losing them," Ban said in a video message for the launch...

Sri Lanka ‘poorly equipped to forecast floods’

SciDev.Net: Sri Lanka is installing a satellite image download unit for flood management. Poor flood forecasting facilities contributed to the damage caused by recent extensive floods in Sri Lanka, the worst in nine decades, scientists said. Between 1 December 2010 and 12 January 2011, Sri Lanka's northern and eastern districts received rainfall that almost equalled the area's total monsoon rains from December to February each year, according to the Colombo-based Disaster Management Centre of Sri Lanka...

Brazilian mining giant buys Amazon palm oil company

Mongabay: Brazilian mining giant buys Amazon palm oil company Vale, a Brazilian mining giant, will buy palm oil producer Biopalma da Amazonia SA Reflorestamento Industria & Comercio, reports Bloomberg. The deal, valued at $173.5 million, will enable the mining company to run more of its operations on palm oil biodiesel. Vale began its palm oil push in 2009 when it formed a partnership with Biopalma. At the time Vale said the deal would save $150 million in fuel costs starting in 2014, with palm oil biodiesel...

China and Brazil Inundate Latin America with Dams

Inter Press Service: The growing presence of Chinese and Brazilian capital in Latin America's energy sector is facilitating the construction of hydroelectric complexes, but is also the fuelling nationalist stances that are adding to the environmental criticisms of those major projects. The three biggest hydroelectric dams in Ecuador are being built by Chinese companies, which have broken the hegemony of Brazilian construction firms like Odebrecht and Andrade Gutierrez. Financing from China's Export-Import Bank,...

From Cambodia to California: world’s top 10 most threatened forests

Mongabay: From Cambodia to California: the world's top 10 most threatened forests Asia-Pacific forests are the most endangered, including 5 of the top 10 threatened forests. Growing populations, expanding agriculture, commodities such as palm oil and paper, logging, urban sprawl, mining, and other human impacts have pushed many of the world's great forests to the brink. Yet scientists, environmentalists, and even some policymakers increasingly warn that forests are worth more standing than felled. They argue...

E.P.A. Plans Limits on Chemicals in Water

New York Times: E.P.A. Plans First Rules Ever on Perchlorate in Drinking Water The Obama administration announced on Wednesday that it planned to regulate toxic substances in drinking water more strictly and would issue the first limits ever on perchlorate, a dangerous chemical found in rocket fuel that has seeped into groundwater in at least 400 locations. The move, announced by the Environmental Protection Agency’s administrator, Lisa P. Jackson, is a major step toward modernizing the nation’s clean water...