*[Enwl-eng] COP28 – Brazil editor on extreme Amazon drought

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Sat Nov 25 03:34:47 MSK 2023


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                   Global Edition | 23 November 2023 
                 
           
                   
                    
                 
           
           
                  In the Amazon, there is extreme drought. Wildlife is perishing. Life for many humans is getting more difficult. The level of water in the region’s rivers continues to fall and the outlook for the year ahead is bleak. This, as scientists, researchers and policy makers from all over the world head to Dubai next week for COP28, the United Nations Climate Change Conference.

                  Many of them will have an eye on the Amazon, trying to understand the causes and predict the consequences of the drought, but also to propose alternative approaches before it’s too late. Our new Brazilian edition of The Conversation is publishing a series of key commissions on the situation in the Amazon, a region that perhaps more than any other represents the health – and future – of the whole of humanity.

                  Among the articles produced by colleagues in recent weeks is this portrait – drawn by biologists Phillip Fearnside and Rosimeire Araújo, both from the Amazon Research Institute (INPA) – detailing the damage that the combination of unprecedented seasonal droughts and the El Niño phenomenon is bringing to the region’s riverside population. They look at what is likely to happen in the months, years and decades to come. And at what can change the course we are now on.

                  In the next few weeks we will have content in text and audio formats from our bureaux around the world, considering all aspects of COP28 and a climate emergency that is now a reality for communities across the planet.
                 
                          Daniel Stycer

                        Editor, Rio de Janeiro
                       
                 
                   
                  The largest tributary on the left bank of the Amazon, the Rio Negro is known for its paradisiacal landscapes, fresh, clean and abundant waters, where pink dolphins swim. Today, much of its riverbed around Manaus looks like this. AP Photo/Edmar Barros 
                  Amazon region hit by trio of droughts in grim snapshot of the century to come 
                  Philip Fearnside, Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia (INPA); Rosimeire Araújo Silva, Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia (INPA) 

                  The drought is expected to affect the region until mid-2024 at the earliest. Signs of its severity include the lowest water levels in the city of Manaus in 121 years.
                 
                       
                          a.. Deforestation jeopardises agribusiness and food security in Brazil and worldwide 
                          Argemiro Teixeira Leite Filho, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG) 

                          Diminishing forests reduces the capacity of the Amazon and Cerrado to regulate rainfall patterns. That’s bad for communities, but also bad for business and global food security.

                          b.. Oxygen in the St. Lawrence Estuary is decreasing — and having a major impact on small animals living there 
                          Ludovic Pascal, Université du Québec à Rimouski (UQAR); Gwénaëlle Chaillou, Université du Québec à Rimouski (UQAR) 

                          The waters of the St. Lawrence are running out of breath and bottom-dwelling organisms are already feeling the effects. Here’s how ecosystems are reacting.
                       
                 
                 
                   
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            From: The Conversation 
            Sent: Thursday, November 23, 2023 11:32 AM
            Subject: COP28 – Brazil editor on extreme Amazon drought

           
           
           
     
 
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