Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Catholic Church in Brazil Enters the 'Forest Code' Frey

Jun 21, 2011
Source: allvoices

A powerful coalition in a predominantly Catholic country has weighed in on the side of environmentalists. Brazil's Catholic Church joined the chorus of those opposed to a controversial 'Forest Code' revamping before the country's legislature. It has passed one of the two assembles, but must pass through the nation's Senate body.

The current bill would significantly alter some of the current rules that protect the Amazon. The bill grants amnesty to illegal deforestation that occurred before July 2008 and shifts control over preservation management from the federal level to the state level.

Proponents claim that the bill helps small landowners, erasing existing violations and allowing them to make a profit from their lands. The amnesty provision changes the way that land set aside for preservation is calculated.

Opponents assert that the shift of calculation is an underhanded way to give a greenlight to developers and loggers, who have huge commercial interests and no concern about the Amazon Rainforest.

Last Friday, Brazil's Catholic Church began a drive to circulate a petition among its 12,000 parishes to rebuff the attempt to alter the current law.

"Our main concern is the impact and consequences of a law of this size on people's lives and the environment," the church said in a statement. "We urge our communities to participate in the process of reform of the Forest Code, mobilizing social forces and promoting a petition against the devastation."

2 comments:

Unknown said...

I wanted to buy a new church and sell my own old one. So, I have decided to go for church mortgage and pull out enough money to buy a new one. How's the plan?

septicalengineer@gmail.com said...

Cutting down the Brazilian Rainforest primarily to clear land to grow sugar cane to make ethanol to burn as fuel in automobiles is, in my mind, a sin. Three quarters of the rain in rainforests is from transpiration of moisture through the leaves of trees. Cut the trees, cut the rain. There are now droughts in areas of Brazil. The same thing is happening in Indonesia - cutting down rainforest to grow palm to make palm oil for biofuel for trucks and buses. Madagascar has already lost the majority of its rainforest due to deforestation by man. In all three cases, the loss of biodiversity, the unique animal life, is sinful. Energy poverty is causing people to sell off rare timber to gain money and to use the wood as fuel where none other exists. There are many reasons for deforestation. Some of this is driven by misinformation about fossil fuels causing climate change. It is deforestation and poor water management that are causing climate change, not clean burning of fossil fuels that emit fertilizer for trees.