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Latin America
Related: About this forumIndigenous peoples by far the best guardians of forests - UN report
Related: Forest governance by indigenous and tribal peoples: An opportunity for climate action in Latin America and the Caribbean (U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization)
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Source: The Guardian
Indigenous peoples by far the best guardians of forests UN report
Preserving Latin Americas forests is vital to fight the climate crisis and deforestation is lower in indigenous territories
Damian Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Thu 25 Mar 2021 14.00 GMT
The embattled indigenous peoples of Latin America are by far the best guardians of the regions forests, according to a UN report, with deforestation rates up to 50% lower in their territories than elsewhere.
Protecting the vast forests is vital to tackling the climate crisis and plummeting populations of wildlife, and the report found that recognising the rights of indigenous and tribal peoples to their land is one of the most cost-effective actions. The report also calls for the peoples to be paid for the environmental benefits their stewardship provides, and for funding for the revitalisation of their ancestral knowledge of living in harmony with nature.
However, the demand for beef, soy, timber, oil and minerals means the threats to indigenous peoples and their forest homes are rising. Hundreds of community leaders have been killed because of disputes over land in recent years and the Covid-19 pandemic has added to the dangers forest peoples face.
Demands by indigenous peoples for their rights have become increasingly visible in recent years, the report said, but this has come with increasing persecution, racism, and assassinations. Supporting these peoples to protect the forests is particularly crucial now with scientists warning that the Amazon is nearing a tipping point where it switches from rainforest to savannah, risking the release of billions of tonnes of carbon into the atmosphere.
The report was produced by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and the Fund for the Development of Indigenous Peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean (Filac), based on a review of more than 300 studies.
-snip-
Preserving Latin Americas forests is vital to fight the climate crisis and deforestation is lower in indigenous territories
Damian Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Thu 25 Mar 2021 14.00 GMT
The embattled indigenous peoples of Latin America are by far the best guardians of the regions forests, according to a UN report, with deforestation rates up to 50% lower in their territories than elsewhere.
Protecting the vast forests is vital to tackling the climate crisis and plummeting populations of wildlife, and the report found that recognising the rights of indigenous and tribal peoples to their land is one of the most cost-effective actions. The report also calls for the peoples to be paid for the environmental benefits their stewardship provides, and for funding for the revitalisation of their ancestral knowledge of living in harmony with nature.
However, the demand for beef, soy, timber, oil and minerals means the threats to indigenous peoples and their forest homes are rising. Hundreds of community leaders have been killed because of disputes over land in recent years and the Covid-19 pandemic has added to the dangers forest peoples face.
Demands by indigenous peoples for their rights have become increasingly visible in recent years, the report said, but this has come with increasing persecution, racism, and assassinations. Supporting these peoples to protect the forests is particularly crucial now with scientists warning that the Amazon is nearing a tipping point where it switches from rainforest to savannah, risking the release of billions of tonnes of carbon into the atmosphere.
The report was produced by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and the Fund for the Development of Indigenous Peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean (Filac), based on a review of more than 300 studies.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/25/indigenous-peoples-by-far-the-best-guardians-of-forests-un-report
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Indigenous peoples by far the best guardians of forests - UN report (Original Post)
Eugene
Mar 2021
OP
Judi Lynn
(160,545 posts)1. Absolutely unbearable. Bolsonaro heavily dislikes Pres. because Biden hates his destruction
of the Amazon forest, the assassinations, the terrorism, the racism, the suffering, and the immediate impact on our one and only world.
Gotta hope more world leaders will bond with Joe Biden and construct an alliance which can put powerful pressure on this bloody, hate and greed-fueled idiot, the "Trump of the Tropics."