From: Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>
To: cypherpunks@ssz.com (Cypherpunks Distributed Remailer)
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Message ID: <199710261400.IAA32530@einstein.ssz.com>
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UTC Datetime: 1997-10-26 13:35:11 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 26 Oct 1997 21:35:11 +0800
From: Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>
Date: Sun, 26 Oct 1997 21:35:11 +0800
To: cypherpunks@ssz.com (Cypherpunks Distributed Remailer)
Subject: G7 to meet in Amazon [CNN]
Message-ID: <199710261400.IAA32530@einstein.ssz.com>
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> G7 TO MEET IN AMAZON TO REVIEW DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
>
> G7 graphic October 25, 1997
> Web posted at: 8:03 p.m. EDT (0003 GMT)
>
> BRASILIA, Brazil (Reuters) -- Brazil and the Group of Seven
> industrialized nations meet in the Amazonian capital of Manaus next
> week to agree on the next stage of a program promoting sustainable
> development in the rain forest.
>
> The annual meeting of G7 donors to the so-called Pilot Program
> (G7-PP), administered by the World Bank, begins formally on Tuesday,
> with Monday dedicated to presentations by Brazilian government
> officials of projects in the Amazon.
>
> "When we speak of the future, that means completing and
> consolidating current projects and thinking about Phase Two of the
> G7-PP," Brazilian Environment Minister Gustavo Krause said.
>
> Starting six years ago, the program has given out $181.3 million of
> a total of $250 million pledged to fund projects such as the
> demarcation of Indian reserves and protecting fishing communities
> from large-scale competitors.
>
> The rest is budgeted, one of the aims of the three-day meeting will
> be to identify new sources of money and coax fresh funds out of the
> participants -- Germany, the United States, the European Union,
> Japan, Italy, the Netherlands, Britain and Canada.
>
> Germany has financed the bulk of projects, contributing 35 percent
> of the total and even more as the principal economic power in the
> European Union.
>
> The United States, despite spending pledges made by President
> Clinton on a visit to Brazil earlier this month, lags in fourth
> place, behind the EU and Japan.
>
> Environmental pressure groups said the most important aspect of the
> meeting is a proposal to establish zones in the gigantic Amazon
> river basin. Map of Brazil
>
> They say Pilot Program managers are resigned to the fact Brazil will
> pursue large-scale infrastructure projects in the rain forest,
> including paving a road from Manaus to Venezuela and river-widening
> projects to boost soybean exports.
>
> "It seems important that the realities of the Amazon region and of
> its political weight and significance must be taken into account if
> effective conservation of at least a good part of the Amazon are to
> be achieved," the World Bank's Rain Forest Unit said in a memo.
>
> The infrastructure projects basically correspond to what the bank
> calls "development corridors" where the "objective is to increase
> and geographically concentrate economic activity."
>
> Such corridors would be counter-balanced by "conservation corridors"
> where biodiversity would be protected.
>
> In between, in so-called inter-corridor spaces, the Rain Forest Unit
> suggests policies should make sure economic activity that preserves
> as much of the forest as possible becomes more attractive than
> clearing land for agriculture.
>
> A concrete task set by the officials meeting in Manaus is to decide
> when Phase Two of the program will begin.
>
> They must also decide what type of transition is needed to blend
> Phase One projects into a broader, cohesive program that fits into
> the Brazilian government's plans for the region.
>
> Copyright 1997 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
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1997-10-26 (Sun, 26 Oct 1997 21:35:11 +0800) - G7 to meet in Amazon [CNN] - Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>