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CHILE: New Law for Native
Forests
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SANTIAGO - The government of
President Michelle Bachelet has taken up a proposal
from environmental organizations for a law on native
forests that frees up a legislative measure, paralyzed
for the past 13 years, of a framework law for protecting
Chile's rich autochthonous forest resources.
Flavia Liberona, coordinator of the Native Forest
Network, applauded the new law, adopted Apr. 19 following
meetings between government authorities and environmentalists.
"The new officials (Bachelet's administration took
office in March) fortunately understood that the previous
bill was not viable. These changes send a political
signal of greater openness than what we saw in the
previous government" of president Ricardo Lagos, Liberona
told Tierramérica in an interview.
The immediate objective will be to regulate the promotion
of forestry plantations and recovery of native forests,
postponing the debate on substituion of autochthonous
forests, which pitted environmental groups against
logging interests.
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VENEZUELA: More Carbon
Credits
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CARACAS - The Andean development
agency CAF, the financial arm of the Andean Community
of Nations (CAN), finalized an agreement with the
Brazilian company Jalles Machado, which produces alcohol
from sugarcane, for the purchase of 110,000 tons'
worth of carbon credits, as established by international
efforts to curb climate change.
"In 2002 an agreement and fund was set up between
the Dutch government and CAF for the purchase of reduced
emissions of greenhouse gases, as outlined by the
Kyoto Protocol, which commits industrialized countries
to reducing emissions or purchase reductions in countries
of the South," Jorge Barrigh, representing the CAF
carbon program, explained to Tierramérica.
The co-generation of energy by Jalles Machado produces
carbon credits because it reduces the need for fossil
fuels at thermoelectric plants. The sum of the trade
was not revealed due to a confidentiality clause in
the contract.
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CUBA: Fuel from Sugarcane
Juice |
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HAVANA - Cuba has started manufacturing
alcohol from sugarcane juice -- somewhat of a novelty
for this island nation, which had focused on producing
sugar from the juice, and only used the byproducts
to make alcohol.
With this new mission, the Heriberto Duquesne company,
in the central province of Villa Clara, will make
the necessary adaptations to its sugar mills and distilleries,
which proved successful in an experimental phase.
Experts see this diversification as the right way
to go. "Alcohol is the fuel of the future, considering
the high prices of petroleum, which is on its way
to depletion," economist Armando Nova told Tierramérica.
Used alone or mixed with gasoline, this derivative
of sugarcane is less costly and less polluting than
other types of fuels.
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HONDURAS: Soldiers Guard
the Forests
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TEGUCIGALPA - For the past three
months, some 2,000 soldiers from the Honduran army
have been guarding the principal ecological preserve
locations around the country to prevent illegal logging.
They also have been dismantling illegal sawmills and
starting a program of reforestation.
Gen. Romeo Vásquez, commander of the army, spoke with
Tierramérica, explaining that, under presidential
mandate, environmental protection is one of the new
roles to be performed by soldiers.
So far this year, they have participated in fighting
258 forest fires and have closed down 583 clandestine
sawmills. In June they will begin reforestation efforts,
which will include "the planting of five million trees
countrywide," Vásquez said.
President Manuel Zelaya Rosales announced a week ago
that he will be "unyielding" with those who harm the
forest, who he threatened to bring in "chained and
shackled" from the country's interior mountainous
areas.
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BRAZIL: Protection for
Flora and Fauna Names
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RIO DE JANEIRO - In the next
few days Brazil will be sending to foreign patent
and trademark offices a list of the traditional names
of Brazilian flora and fauna so that they cannot be
registered as commercial trademarks.
The initiative is an effort to prevent a repeat of
the case of cupuaçú (Theobroma grandiflorum), an Amazon
fruit that the Japanese company Ashai Foods made into
a trademark, but was annulled in 2004. A study found
another 84 names of Brazilian plants and animals registered
in other countries.
"It is an important step," but fighting biopiracy
requires broader measures, Eugenio Pantoja, coordinator
of antipiracy campaigns for the group Amazonlink,
told Tierramérica. Amazonlink led the legal efforts
on cupuaçú and works to train Amazon indigenous peoples
to protect their lands and their traditional knowledge
from biopiracy.
Brazil's Interministerial Group on Intellectual Property
has already approved 2,954 names for the list, including
the trees açaí (Euterpe oleracea), andiroba (Carapa
guianensis Aubl) and umbú (Spondia tuberosa).
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