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Keywords
Boats
Day
Forests (campaign title)
Forests (topography)
KWCI (GPI)
National parks
Outdoors
Rivers
Tropical rainforests
The Tapajós National Forest in Brazil
The Tapajós National Forest is a Brazilian conservation unit, created by Federal Law on 19 February 1974. Covering an area of approximately 545 thousand hectares and is located in the west of Pará state. The area includes the Tapajós and Cupari rivers and the BR 163-Santarém-Cuiabá road.
Containers
Shoot:
Amazon Soya Documentation
The soya industry has temporarily stopped buying produce from newly-deforested areas in the Amazon, but permanent protection is not guaranteed.
A Soya Working Group was created to support the implementation of the moratorium. Members include soya traders such as Bunge, Cargill, ADM and Amaggi, as well as NGOs including Greenpeace, Conservation International, TNC, IPAM and WWF. The Brazilian government also committed to support the moratorium by speeding up the registration and mapping of rural properties. This includes designating environmental and economic zoning within the Amazon biome and prioritising areas where soya production is concentrated. The government also monitors and searches for newly deforested areas, using advanced satellite mapping at a higher level of detail than before.
Conceptually similar
Unique identifier:
GP0STOLF7
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
24/07/2013
Locations:
Brazil
,
National Forest Tapajós
,
Pará
,
South America
,
Tapajós river
Credit line:
© Greenpeace / John Novis
Size:
5760px × 3840px 30.27 MB
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)