| 10/08/2023 Thursday briefing: Inside South America’s summit to save the Amazon | | Esther Addley | |
| | Good morning. “I think the world needs to see this meeting in Belém as the most important landmark ever … when it comes to discussing the climate question.” For once you can forgive the hyperbole of Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, when he spoke about this week’s Amazon summit. Leaders from the eight South American countries that share the river basin have been meeting this week in the Brazilian city to discuss an issue that, by any measure, is a global emergency: how to protect the vast rainforest and safeguard its critical role in regulating the planetary climate. The stakes could scarcely be higher. But does the Belém Declaration, issued on Tuesday evening, go far enough? Last night, after further discussions with leaders from other rainforest regions around the world, Lula demanded that wealthy industrialised nations pay their dues after two centuries of pollution, saying: “Nature needs money.” Tom Phillips, the Guardian’s Latin America correspondent, is in the Amazon city for the summit; he spoke to me, from a conference centre garden full of squawking tropical birds, about whether Lula has really succeeded in securing the rainforest’s future. First, today’s headlines. | | | Five big stories | 1 | | 2 | Northern Ireland | The UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office has launched an investigation into an unprecedented data breach that disclosed details of more than 10,000 police officers and staff in Northern Ireland. The agency, which regulates data privacy laws, is working with the Police Service of Northern Ireland to establish the level of risk amid warnings that the leak may compel officers to leave the force or move their home address. | 3 | | 4 | | 5 | Media | Employees at ITV’s This Morning were allegedly subjected to “bullying, discrimination and harassment”, according to staff members who have spoken out after Phillip Schofield’s departure from the programme. Some workers claim they attempted to raise concerns about the programme only to face “further bullying and discrimination” by bosses for speaking out. |
| | | In depth: ‘The forest unites us. It is time to look at the heart of our continent and consolidate our Amazon identity’ | | The Amazon stretches across a mind-bogglingly enormous stretch of planet Earth, twice the size of India. It is home to 400bn trees, tens of thousands of species of plants – and one-fifth of the world’s rainwater. Its health affects us all – critically. But its territory is controlled by just eight governments, and 60% of its surface area is ultimately the responsibility of one man, Brazil’s president, who called this week’s summit. Lula’s ambition for the meeting is clear. But how achievable is his “Amazon dream” of greener cities, cleaner air, mercury-free rivers, and a dignified, sustainable life for Indigenous people?
The background “I’m still pinching myself, really, to be here witnessing this after the four years we have had,” says Tom. Until January, Brazil was in the grip of a far-right government led by Jair Bolsonaro, who demolished environmental protections and permitted a period of rampant and lawless exploitation of the Amazon. “It would have been absolutely unthinkable that a Brazilian government under Bolsonaro would have brought together thousands of environmentalists, Indigenous activists and policymakers to discuss sustainable development and protecting the rainforest. So it’s been quite incredible – and very unexpected – to see them coming from all over South America to talk about those issues.” Bolsonaro slashed environmental regulations, hobbled agencies charged with protecting the region and incentivised the exploitation of Indigenous territories; under his government, destruction of the forest soared. In just over seven months, remarkably, his successor has already cut deforestation by 42% – and Lula remains outspoken in his support of protection measures for the Amazon and its Indigenous custodians. There is a long way to go, however, and with aggressive assaults on the enormous forest from agribusiness, mining gangs, drug traffickers and loggers, this is an enormous problem.
What’s been agreed? The conference had two distinct programmes over two days: on Tuesday, presidents, prime ministers and senior ministers from Bolivia, Colombia, Peru, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname and Ecuador met with the Brazilian delegation to discuss Amazon-specific measures. The day concluded with the Belém Declaration, in which the politicians called on wealthy nations to help them develop a Marshall-style plan to help defend the Amazon, and pledged to work together to ensure its survival. The document calls for debt relief in exchange for climate action, agrees to strengthen regional law enforcement cooperation to crack down on human rights violations, illegal mining and pollution, and urges industrialised countries to comply with obligations to provide financial support to developing countries. | | “The forest unites us. It is time to look at the heart of our continent and consolidate, once and for all, our Amazon identity,” said Lula (pictured above). “In an international system that was not built by us, we were historically relegated to a subordinate place as a supplier of raw materials. A just ecological transition will allow us to change this.” Not everyone is happy, says Tom, with some civil society groups and environmentalists welcoming the gathering as a great first step, but feeling the declaration itself “a bit wishy-washy and vague”, without some of the binding commitments many wanted to see. Most strikingly, it doesn’t contain a commitment to achieving zero deforestation by 2030, as many hoped. However, he says, “I don’t know if one should overplay those frustrations, because most of the countries in the bloc [including Brazil, which controls 60% of the Amazon] have made those commitments already.” Day 2 saw the South American politicians meet with leaders of other rainforest regions around the world, including the Republic of the Congo, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Indonesia. In a declaration entitled “United For Our Forests”, the global group reaffirmed their commitment to reducing deforestation and finding ways to reconcile economic prosperity with environmental protection. They also voiced concern at the developed world’s failure to meet mitigation targets and provide $100bn a year in climate financing, calling for that to rise to $200bn by 2030. Lula said the new rainforest bloc had a simple message to those “rich countries”: “If they want to effectively preserve what is left of the forests, they must spend money – not just to take care of the canopy of the trees but to take care of the people who live beneath that canopy and who want to work, to study and to eat and … to live decently.”
What happens next? From Lula’s perspective, “this is a massive political success”, says Tom. The president has long sought to build multilateral blocs with less developed nations, and repeatedly called on industrialised countries to help fund climate action that otherwise disproportionately falls to poorer ones. He is expected to do so again, backed by his new coalition, when he addresses the UN general assembly in September, and later in the year at the climate summit Cop28 in Dubai. Belém itself will host Cop in 2025. At home in Brazil, the new administration is still trying to repair Bolsonaro’s damage to the Amazon, but faces opposition to its bold environmental agenda in the country’s more rightwing congress. “Also, we are now entering the burning season in the Amazon [when low rainfall leads to a spike in fires], so that’s going to be another big test of how much control the government has.” On the plus side, says Tom, the febrile political climate that saw Bolsonaro supporters violently storm the country’s presidential palace in January has greatly subsided. “So I think there’s hope in that sense. But the forces that are opposed to protecting the Amazon – illegal gold mining, organised crime – aren’t going anywhere. It takes a lot more than beautiful rhetoric such as we saw from Lulu yesterday to solve these problems, which are decades old.” This will be my last First Edition for the time being. It’s been lovely writing this newsletter for you all – enjoy the rest of your summer! | | | What else we’ve been reading | | SheraSeven is a self-described “financial adviser” whose central dating doctrine is: snag a wealthy man through manipulative means and live a life of luxury paid for by him. Her content has led her to be described as the “female Andrew Tate”. Kimberly McIntosh examines why her advice resonates with so many people. Nimo When Apple Maps launched in 2012, it was so bad it marked an Irish cafe as an airport and placed one Australian city 40 miles from its actual location, leading to some travellers having to be rescued by police after they failed to find it. A decade on, things have changed, says Sam Wolfson, especially on cycling lanes and public transport (pictured above). But what about all the things it doesn’t tell us? Esther Mallory McDuff’s contemplative piece on what she learned from hiking with a partner who always walked ahead is a really interesting exploration of the lessons she learned in the different ways human’s connect and how it manifests in relationships. Nimo I’m not much of a gamer or a Star Wars obsessive, but even I think Disney’s immersive Galactic Starcruiser “Star Wars hotel”, in which guests take part in real life multiplayer puzzles, sounds amazing. A shame, then, that it’s closing. Adrian Hon booked into one of the last cabins. Esther Rachel Connolly waves goodbye to the “Immersive Art Experience” as it wanes in popularity, and argues they are little more than cash grabs: “The idea that Van Gogh’s work can’t be enjoyed without the aid of gizmos and contraptions – and an inflated cost – strikes me as the most cynical and elitist approach to art I can imagine”. Nimo
| | | Sport | | Football | USA goalkeeper Matt Turner joined Nottingham Forest from Arsenal for a reported £10m on Wednesday. Turner has signed a four-year deal with the Premier League club. He only joined Arsenal in June last year from New England Revolution. Football | West Ham have agreed deals to sign Manchester United’s Harry Maguire and Southampton’s James Ward-Prowse. Both signings are key targets for David Moyes, who has been looking to strengthen his squad since the £105m sale of Declan Rice to Arsenal. Boxing | Anthony Joshua has called for leading fighters to be subject to random drug testing. It comes after his Saturday night fight with Dillian Whyte was called off after it emerged that his British rival had returned a positive test result for a still unnamed illegal substance. Whyte said he was “shocked and devastated” to learn of the test’s findings, while stating his innocence. | Sign up for Soccer with Jonathan Wilson | Jonathan Wilson brings expert analysis on the biggest stories from European soccer | We thought you should know this newsletter may contain information about Guardian products and services | |
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| | The front pages | | The Guardian reports that one in three new school leavers may opt to study locally, under its headline: “Cost of living crisis forces student ‘Covid generation’ to live at home”. The Mail, meanwhile, asks “Have we finally turned corner on mortgage misery?” The i leads with “New talks on tented camps for migrants in Essex – amid Tory spilt on crackdown”. The Telegraph has “Cabinet call on PM to ditch ECHR”, claiming a “third of members want human rights changes at centre of election campaign”. The Financial Times carries an exclusive: “Chinese tech giants in race for $5bn of Nvidia chips to drive AI ambitions”. Finally, the Mirror reports “ITV hit by more bully claims”. | | | Today in Focus | | The Qur’an burnings in Sweden: who is fanning the flames? As Miranda Bryant in Stockholmtells Michael Safi, Sweden’s extremely liberal freedom of expression laws allow for the causing of extreme offence, but the backlash to recent instances of Qur’an burnings has ballooned out of control. Sweden is facing diplomatic pressure from the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, which represents 57 countries. At the same time it is fretting over the support of Turkey to allow it to become a full Nato member. | | | | Cartoon of the day | Steve Bell | | | | The Upside | A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad | | Kemisola Bolarinwa has always been interested in robotics and innovation. At school she came second in a competition to build a radio and while she did not win, the tournament set her on a path to invent a bra that might be able to detect cancer. Bolarinwa is now a robotics entrepreneur and founder of Nextwear Technology, which will soon launch what is believed to be the first trial of a wearable, battery-operated device to detect breast cancer – the Smart Bra. The trial will take place in Nigeria, where breast cancer is the most common type of the disease and has the highest number of deaths. More than 28,000 Nigerian women were diagnosed with breast cancer in 2020 and more than half died from the disease. Given the lack of oncologists in the country, Bolarinwa believes this device can be a transformative piece of healthcare especially as women can wear it at home and get the results through an app on their phone. Similar technology is being developed in Sweden and Mexico. Bolarinwa wants her work to inspire younger women, who made up an estimated 22% of Stem graduates in Nigeria last year. “There’s a need for me to go into advocacy for young women and girls because we need inclusion of women in the tech space and Stem-related fields,” she says. Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday | | | Bored at work? | And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day – with plenty more on the Guardian’s Puzzles app for iOS and Android. Until tomorrow. | |
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