亚马逊国家峰会面临石油和森林砍伐问题的分歧

图片来源:lazyllama/AdobeStock
图片来源:lazyllama/AdobeStock

八个亚马逊雨林国家将于周二举行 14 年来的首次峰会,预计将在阻止新石油钻探和结束森林砍伐的提议上面临分歧。

亚马逊合作条约组织(ACTO)会议聚集了来自玻利维亚、巴西、哥伦比亚、厄瓜多尔、圭亚那、秘鲁、苏里南和委内瑞拉的国家元首,在巴西北部城市贝伦举行为期两天的会议。

     他们的目标是在国际谈判中就可持续发展融资和土著包容性等约 130 个问题制定统一的政策、目标和立场。

但在上个月的峰会前会议上,哥伦比亚总统古斯塔沃·佩特罗敦促巴西总统路易斯·伊纳西奥·卢拉·达席尔瓦阻止亚马逊地区所有新的石油开发。巴西正在考虑是否在亚马逊河口附近开发潜在的巨大海上石油发现。

“我们要让亚马逊雨林中的碳氢化合物进行勘探吗?将它们作为勘探区块交付?那里有财富还是有人类的死亡?” 佩特罗在与卢拉一起发表讲话时问道。

几天后,佩特罗在《迈阿密先驱报》的一篇专栏文章中强调了这个问题,他写道:“作为国家元首,我们必须确保停止在亚马逊地区进行新的石油和天然气勘探。”

关于在亚马逊河口附近钻探石油的争论在卢拉执政七个月的政府中引发了激烈的内讧,使地区发展的倡导者与环保主义者对立起来。    

当被问及石油是否会成为峰会协议的因素时,巴西外交官上周告诉记者,联合声明仍在谈判中,更广泛的经济发展正在讨论中。

一位未获授权向媒体发言的巴西政府官员表示,哥伦比亚很容易提议不再在亚马逊地区进行新的钻探,因为与巴西或秘鲁不同,哥伦比亚在那里没有大量的石油储量。

卢拉则在哥伦比亚莱蒂西亚举行的峰会前会议上敦促该地区所有国家承诺到2030年结束森林砍伐。只有玻利维亚和委内瑞拉尚未做出这样的承诺。

巴西政府消息人士称,玻利维亚可能成为此类 2030 年区域协议的障碍。据全球森林观察 (Global Forest Watch) 称,由于火灾和农业快速扩张,去年那里的原始森林损失增加了 32%。

玻利维亚政府没有回应置评请求。

峰会上可能出现的其他分歧是关于优先事项的更微妙的分歧。哥伦比亚主办了峰会前会议,议程的首要议题是跨境合作,以应对亚马逊地区贩毒者犯下环境犯罪的日益严重的威胁。 

相比之下,巴西强调可持续发展的机会,反映了卢拉的竞选纲领重点关注减贫和保护。


 (杰克·斯普林的报道;波哥大的奥利弗·格里芬和蒙得维的亚的露辛达·埃利奥特的补充报道;布拉德·海恩斯和辛西娅·奥斯特曼的编辑)


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Amazon Nations Summit Faces Fault Lines on Oil, Deforestation

Credit: lazyllama/AdobeStock
Credit: lazyllama/AdobeStock

Eight Amazon rainforest nations are expected to face divisions over proposals to block new oil drilling and end deforestation when they meet on Tuesday for their first summit in 14 years.

The meeting of the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO) gathers heads of state from Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela for two days in the northern Brazilian city of Belem.

     They will aim to forge unified policies, goals and positions in international negotiations on some 130 issues ranging from financing for sustainable development to indigenous inclusion.

But at a pre-summit meeting last month, Colombian President Gustavo Petro pushed his Brazilian counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to block all new oil development in the Amazon. Brazil is weighing whether to develop a potentially huge offshore oil find near the mouth of the Amazon River.

"Are we going to let hydrocarbons be explored in the Amazon rainforest? To deliver them as exploration blocks? Is there wealth there or is there the death of humanity?" Petro asked in a speech alongside Lula.

Days later, Petro underscored the issue in an op-ed in the Miami Herald, writing: "As heads of state, we must assure the end of new oil and gas exploration in the Amazon."

The debate over drilling for oil near the mouth of the Amazon has sparked fierce infighting in Lula's seven-month-old government, pitting advocates for regional development against environmentalists.    

Asked whether oil would factor into an accord at the summit, Brazilian diplomats told journalists last week that a joint statement was still being negotiated and economic development more broadly was under discussion.

A Brazilian government official, who was not authorized to speak to the media, said that Colombia was in an easy position to propose no new drilling in the Amazon because it did not have significant oil reserves there, unlike Brazil or Peru.

For his part, Lula pushed at the pre-summit meeting in Leticia, Colombia, for all countries in the region to pledge an end to deforestation by 2030. Only Bolivia and Venezuela have not yet made such a commitment.

Bolivia could be a barrier to such a regional 2030 pact, the Brazilian government source said. Primary forest loss there rose 32% last year amid fires and rapid agricultural expansion, according to Global Forest Watch.

The Bolivian government did not respond to requests for comment.

Other differences that could surface at the summit are more subtle disagreements about priorities. Colombia hosted the pre-summit meeting where top on the agenda was cross-border collaboration to address the rising threat of drug traffickers perpetrating environmental crimes in the Amazon. 

Brazil, by contrast, has emphasized opportunities for sustainable development, reflecting Lula's campaign platform focused on poverty reduction and conservation.


 (Reporting by Jake Spring; Additional reporting by Oliver Griffin in Bogota and Lucinda Elliott in Montevideo; Editing by Brad Haynes and Cynthia Osterman)


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