25 Apr 2025 14:00:00 GMT?.css-1txiau5-AnswerContainer{color:var(--GlobalColorScheme-Text-secondaryText2);}Santarem won 2–0 over SC Lusitania on Fri
This is 9 of the Liga 3 Relegation Group B
Predicted lineups are available for the match a few days in advance while the actual lineup will be available about an hour ahead of the match
The current head to head record for the teams are Santarem 2 win(s)
Have scored 7 goals in their last 5 matches
Who won between Santarem and SC Lusitania on Fri
25 Apr 2025 14:00:00 GMT?Santarem won 2–0 over SC Lusitania on Fri
25 Apr 2025 14:00:00 GMT.InsightsHave scored 5 goals in their last 5 matches
Santarem is playing home against SC Lusitania on Fri
Reporting by Roberto Samora in Sao Paulo; Writing by Andre Romani; Editing by Aurora Ellis
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plantações de soja e milho deixam pequenos agricultores isolados - Vitor Shimomura/Brasil de Fato
a group of monkeys can be seen on the highest branches of mango trees surrounding the house where farmers José Aldenor da Silva Pedroso and Expedita de Souza Lima live
It is located in the rural community of Chaves
in the western region of the state of Pará
They've got used to us,” says the farmer
He believes that animals go there searching for food
“It's a good thing having these trees here for them to get some fruit
the family property is a green island in the middle of a monoculture desert
it is home to three springs surrounded by preserved forests
a dirt road demarcates the borders: on the one side
plowed land stretches as far as the eye can see
memories of the forest are all that remain.
“When about 70 families were living here
we used to come here at midday or one o'clock in the afternoon
put it on our backs and walk from there to here
under the trees,” Pedroso recalls.
With the advance of crop monocultures in the Planalto Santareno region – neighboring the cities of Santarém
Belterra and Mojuí dos Campos – green areas lost space
there's nothing,” the farmer laments
soy production goes down the Tapajós River to the Amazon and then to other countries
The port contributed to expanding monoculture plantations around the BR 163 highway
other agribusiness companies set up ports and infrastructure projects to export grains
According to the report Soy in the Northern Logistics Corridor
published by the Institute for Socio-Economic Studies (INESC
the problem could become even more serious with the construction of Ferrogrão
This railroad will connect Sinop (in the state of Mato Grosso) to the district of Miritituba
in the city of Itaitua (in the state of Pará)
the railroad will cross a highly socio-biodiverse region
affecting at least 17 Conservation Units of various categories
as well as at least six Indigenous Lands of the Kayapó and Panará peoples,” warns the study
Forests disappear, whole communities disappear, and soy deserts take their place. In 2005, Mojuí dos Campos had 3,000 hectares covered with soybean plantations
According to data taken from the Mapbiomas platform
the area jumped to 51,400 hectares in 2023
Among the three municipalities in the region
Mojuí leads in terms of environmental devastation
The annual rate of deforestation there rose from 400 hectares in 2013 to 6,100 in 2021
The data were collected by the Brazilian Amazon Forest Satellite Monitoring Program (PRODES
run by the National Institute for Space Research (INPE
The intense deforestation in Mojuí gave the city the pole position on the list of the 70 municipalities with the most deforestation in the Amazon
updated in 2024 by Brazil’s Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change
These locations are responsible for almost 80% of deforestation in the Amazonian biome
They are monitored under the Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Deforestation in the Legal Amazon (PPCDAm
When Brasil de Fato visited the region in mid-November 2024
the crops were in the final phase of the so-called sanitary void
a three-month period in which crops are suspended to contain the spread of the fungus that causes Asian Soybean Rust
a disease that can result in losses of up to 90% of the crop.
All that remained were the cut stalks of corn
dried foliage and a few ears of corn accentuated the contrast between monoculture and family farming areas.
Pedroso is one of the locals who insists on planting
With the help of his son José André Lima Pedroso and his wife
"There's a bit of everything," he says
With no plans or desire to abandon the land
the family deals with the pressure of living surrounded by a monoculture
Three families stand still in the Chaves community
on the other side of the bridge," says Expedita.
The residents' departure began in the late 1990s when the first family farmers sold their land to cattle ranchers before monocultures arrived
pastures were taken over by soybean plantations
increasing pressure on small farmers to sell their properties
president of the Mojuí dos Campos Rural Workers' and Family Farmers' Union
of the 130 or so rural communities in the city
Others have lost ground to soybean plantations and are facing the process of disappearing.
She explains that this process happens in two phases
soy growers – called sojeiros or sojicultores – seek out the residents and make them an offer to buy their land
Those who remain in the community live surrounded by soy and often have no other option but to look for another place to live
"There are people that were forced to leave because they could not make ends meet anymore due to plagues
and also the poison [used by agribusiness]," says Barreto
Retired family farmer Messias Tiburcio de Castro is among those who have decided to sell their properties
He left the Chaves community around seven years ago after spending five decades there
[cms-gallery id=01bda73d-4a3e-485a-9108-804b2b8445df]
“A sojeiro started buying my neighbors' lands
He kept buying and buying and we were almost isolated,” he says
On the property where they raised their six children
the couple lives on a farm in the Baixa da Onça community.
you don't have to look around to feel the presence of the monoculture
The couple retells the last time soybean farmers applied limestone
a mineral used to improve the quality of the soil and prepare it for planting
The wind carried the fine powder through the air
spreading it over properties around the plantation area
“The hammock was covered with limestone,” says Muniz
pointing to the blue hammock tied between two trees near the house
the toxic smell is carried by the wind," Castro says
Barreto closely monitors the consequences of the growth of grain plantations
a stream died due to pesticide contamination and deforestation
this stream was used to everything: we used to shower with it
Near the spring, sojicultores cut the riparian forest
what is left of the green area becomes a refuge for different species
such as the monkeys that visit Pedroso's yard
capybaras devoured açaí seedlings the family planted
“Things have become more complicated for us now because we have to work to support ourselves and the animals,” says the farmer
insects are also making inroads into preserved territories and family farming areas
I do my best not to use poison,” says Pedroso
the pesticides applied to the soybeans push the pests onto the family's crops
There's no way out,” he laments.
Without knowing whether he was contaminated by pesticides carried through the wind
the farmer is now worried about his health
A test carried out in 2023 by the Evandro Chagas Institute confirmed the presence of glyphosate in Pedroso's urine
According to the World Health Organization (WHO)
The farmer's wife and son were also tested and came back negative
“I've been tested again and I'm waiting for the new results
I don't know what's going to happen
damned if we don’t,” he concluded
Following the dirt road that works as a border between Pedroso’s family property and the soy plantation
it is possible to get a sense of the devastation
reminding us that although the Santareno Planalto has some Cerrado characteristics
two huge mango trees shade the graves in the cemetery of the Baixa do Cipó community
the only reminder of that part of the village
those who don't know that there used to be a community there
those who don't know the history of the place
because a soy desert is the only thing that can be seen” Barreto laments
In Belterra spraying of pesticides near a school caused classes to be suspended
In addition to the 19 communities that have disappeared in the region
This is the case of São Francisco da Volta Grande
where the backyards of some houses border the grain plantation area.
“The community is gradually disappearing
giving way to more and more soy plantations,” says Giselida Nunes da Silva
who has been teaching at Vitalina Motta Elementary School since 2017.
the 300 or so students served by the school had classes suspended due to pesticide contamination
students and teachers getting sick,” says Silva
Teachers recorded videos of pesticides being applied during class time
the Pará Public Prosecutor's Office opened a civil inquiry proposing that the State Secretariat for Environment and Sustainability
the Belterra Municipal Secretariat for Environmental Management and Tourism and the Pará State Agricultural Defense Agency inspect the plantations around the school
The document asked the agencies to assess whether pesticide spraying was being carried out within the minimum distance required by environmental legislation.
the Institute for the Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (also known in Brazil as Ibama) issued 38 notices to the soy producer responsible for environmental crimes around the school
The institute fined the producer R$ 1 million (about US$ 164,000) and banned pesticide use until its determinations were met
the pesticide was applied in the early hours of the morning and
students and teachers became ill when they arrived at school
“We did some toxicology tests here at the school to identify poisoning risks
We’re waiting for the results,” says teacher Heloise Rocha
who has worked at the school for nine years
The case is being investigated by the Santarém Agrarian Conflict Police Station.
“It's not just the school that's being poisoned
it's the community as a whole that's being affected by this,” laments Silva
*This article was produced in partnership with the INESC (Institute for Socio-Economic Studies)
All original content produced and editorially authored by Brasil de Fato may be reproduced
provided it is not altered and proper credit is given
All original content produced and editorially authored by Brasil de Fato may be reproduced
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Djalma Moreira Lima used to walk throughout the rainforest to collect copal resin
He would wander around for hours looking for jatobás
Amazonian trees whose trunks secrete the sticky substance
which turns hard in contact with the air and falls on the forest floor as little rocks
whoever was smart enough to look among the leaves found more,” Lima told Mongabay
“We would come back with sacks loaded with 4 or 5 kilos [9-11 pounds] of resin.”
Lima’s Suruacá community is located in the Extractivist Reserve Tapajós-Arapiuns
an area that was a hub for copal resin production during most of the 20th century
is expelled by two species of trees every time there is a wound in their trunks — the jatobá (Hymenaea courbaril) secretes a lighter-colored transparent resin
“I think all the communities used to take rosin,” Lima said
The material collected by river and traditional communities was sent to Santarém
and from there to urban centers in Brazil and abroad
the jatobá’s secretion would be used to varnish wood furniture
Corrêa estimated Brazil’s production of copal resin at around 120 tons a year during the first half of the 20th century
Data from Brazil’s exports varied a lot
“Brazil never really stood out as an exporter,” he said
mentioning that Europe and the United States would supply most of its resin from Africa
But this relevant source of income for Amazon communities has sharply declined in the second half of the 20th century when the natural resin was substituted by petroleum-based varnishes
the collection of jutaicica is practically extinct
restricted to domestic use in the traditional communities that use it to make fire (it’s flammable) or to waterproof clay pots
“I don’t know anyone who works with it anymore,” Lima said
owner of a store selling Amazon products in Santarém
used to buy the resin from local communities every time a client asked for it
“I don’t even buy it because I don’t have anyone to sell it to,” she told Mongabay
Although it is unthinkable to return to the production levels of the last century
Corrêa said he believes jutaicica could once again have a role in the forest economy
we’re talking about small and varied quantities
But resin could be one more component in a basket of Amazonian products,” he said
A study by the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the New Climate Economy found that boosting the Amazon’s bioeconomy would generate an additional 40 billion reais ($8.3 billion) GDP annually for the Brazilian Amazon
the transformation could generate 312,000 additional jobs
Besides being a sustainable alternative to petroleum-based varnishes
researchers say jutaicica could work as an incentive for keeping the forest standing — around 80% of Amazon vegetal production is associated with timber extraction
is a highly coveted wood for flooring,” Côrrea said
Jutaicica could even be used to aggregate value in the Amazon timber industry
which sells most of the forest’s noble wood as low-valued
“You could have objects made from Amazonian wood
with a proper design and finished with a local varnish,” Côrrea said
adding that universities should have a key role in helping the communities to reintroduce it into the market as a sustainable product
Banner image: A jatobá (Hymenaea courbaril) treen in Maui, Hawaii. Image by Forest and Kim Starr via Flickr (CC BY 2.0)
Are the Amazon’s biggest trees dying? Forest coroners investigate
Côrrea, J.J.L., Almeida, T. E., Pimentel Santos, M. R., & Giacomin, L. L. (2022). Assigning a value to standing forest: a historical review of the use and characterization of copal resin in the region of Santarém, Central Amazonia. Rodriguésia, 73. Retrieved from https://www.scielo.br/j/rod/a/N8mtx4SwBzf4W7F7M79xdSH/?format=pdf&lang=en
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The “fortress conservation” model is under pressure in East Africa
as protected areas become battlegrounds over history
and global efforts to halt biodiversity loss
Mongabay’s Special Issue goes beyond the region’s world-renowned safaris to examine how rural communities and governments are reckoning with conservation’s colonial origins
and trying to forge a path forward […]
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Santarém City Council has approved a 50 million euro private investment project
which includes a new commercial area next to the current “retail park”
to “respond” to the construction of the future Hospital da Luz unit
“We want to respond to the construction of the new Hospital da Luz […] and meet the needs of the city of Santarém
especially in the extension of the current retail park
We want to offer a greater number of square metres and have more commercial surfaces,” Diogo Grade
the project foresees the construction of four lots for commerce
giving continuity to the existing commercial area
as well as the creation of support services for the hospital unit
According to Diogo Grade, there is the possibility of building a senior residence and clinical analysis laboratories. The possibility of one of the lots housing a new hotel unit to take advantage of its proximity to the National Center for Agricultural Exhibitions and Markets (CNEMA) is still under study
“We have some operators who have agreed to participate and practically all the brands on the market have shown interest in being present in this new space,” said the manager
Construction work is expected to begin in early 2026
with an expected creation of around 300 jobs
"We are pleased with the promoters' intention to invest in that area
That area is growing with the construction of the new Hospital da Luz
There is a new centrality and this project is a way of bringing the plateau closer to CNEMA itself [...] and it will develop the municipality of Santarém by generating jobs"
"We also have housing construction starting in that area to meet demand
We are talking about a hospital that will create 500 jobs
we have to create other responses from the point of view of public space
these investments bring other public and private investments," he stressed
highlighting the "economic dynamics" that the projects bring to the municipality
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2024– The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in Brazil conducted a multidisciplinary training on the identification
and assistance of victims of human trafficking from August 1 to 2
organized by UNODC through the Tapajós Project in partnership with the State of Pará Prosecutor’s Office (MPPA)
included the participation of local and national government institutions
a representative from UNODC Human Trafficking and Migrant Smuggling Section (HTMSS) in Vienna
As the first training on human trafficking conducted by UNODC in the region
the two-day program included presentations on the identification of the elements and purposes that constitute the crime
the most common recruitment methods and forms of exploitation
and the identification and prosecution of perpetrators
including case study discussions and simulated interview methodology for the identification of trafficking victims (see below)
"Human trafficking is a crime that needs to be recognized to be combated
but it is still invisible at various levels
it is essential that the network is trained to identify and assist trafficking victims—who often do not recognize themselves as such—and that the State can investigate and holding perpetrators criminally responsible," said Herena Melo
Also present at the opening session were the municipal secretary of Labor and Social Assistance (Semtras) of Santarém
Celsa Brito Silva; MPPA prosecutor Lilian Cabral; and UNODC monitoring and evaluation (M&E) officer Savia Cordeiro
The training panelists included Alline Pedra
UNODC crime prevention and criminal justice officer in Vienna; Eduardo Serra
executive secretary of the National Commission for the Eradication of Forced Labor (Conatrae); José Weyne
psychologist and member of the Human Rights Commission of the Legislative Assembly of Rio de Janeiro (Alerj); and Francisco Alan
lawyer for the Pastoral Land Commission (CPT) and member of the State of Pará’s Commission for the Eradication of Forced Labor (Coetrae-PA)
Simulated Interviews – Part of the training consisted of a simulated interview exercise to identify victims of human trafficking
The activity's methodology was based on a UNODC manual with lessons learned and best practices from similar exercises conducted in other countries that are signatories to the UN Protocol on Trafficking in Persons
participants were exposed to essential theoretical questions to grasp the concept of human trafficking
a scenario based on a real case—of workers rescued from conditions analogous to slavery in a Pará mining site—was distributed to serve as the basis for the victim identification exercise through a simulated interview
The entire simulation was conducted by the UNODC team and invited experts
which also includes simulated investigations and trials as a learning mechanism
will be replicated in future Tapajós Project training sessions and demonstrates UNODC's commitment to bringing innovative methodologies to address human trafficking in a local context—in this case
Tapajós Project – TAPAJÓS is a project implemented since 2021 by UNODC Brazil under its mandate to assist countries in the implementation of the UN Protocol on Trafficking in Persons
Department of State’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons (J-TIP)
The first phase of the project (2021-2023) aimed to calculate the prevalence of human trafficking and forced labor in gold mining areas in the Tapajós River basin in the state of Pará
the second phase (2023-26) of the project foresees the implementation of a series of activities and interventions—co-produced with local partners—to prevent and reduce these crimes in the region
Learn more about UNODC's work on this topic here
Saiba mais: Agenda 2030
Todas as notícias
Copyright©2025 UNODC, All Rights Reserved, Legal Notice
In line with the B!Pact and B Corp processes undertaken by the Bonduelle Group
the Santarém plant in Portugal launched a CSR project to produce energy using photovoltaic panels
The objective: reducing its energy purchases and CO2 emissions in order to feed the present while protecting the future
implemented in 2019 saw the installation of a 5,000 m2 roof composed of photovoltaic panels
the company was able to decrease its energy purchases by 8% a year (a savings of 1,200 megawatts) all while accelerating the reduction of its CO2 emissions (570 tons)
In order to give more visibility to the project – and respond to staff requests for covered parking – the solar panels were installed on the roof over the plant’s parking lot
photovoltaic energy has largely been democratized
Since the price of solar panels is more affordable
other projects of this type should see the light of day at Bonduelle
particularly at Bonduelle Europe Long Life
the Santarém plant is proud to have initiated this project within the group: a big thanks goes out to the teams mobilized in this adventure
Syn-Pro by SISIS Cricket Groundcare Machinery
Oeiras vs Gamblers SC
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and it will see six teams play a total of 34 matches
Not only does ECB Portugal 2025 start on the same date as IPL 2025
it also follows the same format: the top four teams will qualify for the playoffs
The entirety of the tournament will be played at the Santarem Cricket Ground in Santarem
You can watch live streaming of ECS Portugal 2025 in India on FanCode
You can create your Fantasy XI for ECS Portugal 2025 using Cricket.com’s very own Criclytics
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delegation of 25 athletes collected 20 total medals
Five athletes claimed individual gold at the competition
N.J./Elite Trampoline Academy) and Ryan Maccagnan (Colorado Springs
Colo./Stars Gymnastics) topped the U21 women’s and men’s trampoline podiums with scores of 53.080 and 57.370
N.J./Elite Trampoline Academy) scored a 52.900 in to take the U16 women’s trampoline title
N.J./Elite Trampoline Academy) and Nate Erkert (Wildwood
Mo./Elite Trampoline Academy) won the women’s and men’s U16 double mini competition with scores of 25.900 and 26.300
N.J./Elite Trampoline Academy) and Derek Ruehl (Worden
Ill./Kris Power Tumbling) each earned silver behind their teammates in U16 double mini competition with scores of 24.800 and 26.200
DeHanes also secured U16 women’s trampoline silver with a 52.390
Ill./Kris Power Tumbling) and Skye Hawk (Allen
Edelman took women’s bronze with a 52.350 while Miner did the same in men’s with a 52.390
McCoy posted a 50.440 and Williams a 56.930 to place third in U21 trampoline competition
while Hawk put up a 21.800 for the third spot of the U17 women’s tumbling podium
Texas/Southlake Gymnastics Academy) and Brooklyn Jolley (West Haven
Utah/Northern Star Bounders) also were featured in finals throughout the competition
each landing fourth in their respective divisions
Bain scored a 49.860 in U21 individual trampoline
Erkert was fifth in U16 men’s trampoline with a 31.950 and Kate Arakawa (Celina
Texas/Eagle Gymnastics Academy) finished seventh in the U16 women’s final with a 48.420
Ind./Element Tumbling and Trampoline) and Alexander Rozenshteyn (Cranford
N.J./Elite Trampoline Academy) also were in action in Santarem
was the top scorer in U21 women’s (304.290)
U16 men’s (281.490) and U16 women’s (286.910) trampoline
as well as in U16 men’s (155.200) and women’s (155.200) double mini
America claimed women’s team silver with a 131.800 and men’s team bronze with a 134.600
The U21 men’s tumbling team was fifth in team competition with a 193.320
The 2023 Coimbra World Cup July 7-8 is the next trampoline and tumbling stop in Portugal for the U.S
Santarém City Council is developing a project for the regeneration of the riverfront
with the aim of “returning the Tagus River to the city and the municipality”
“The regeneration of the waterfront is a priority [...]
rescuing its importance as a symbol of life
According to information given to Lusa by João Leite
the Chamber has already secured 3.5 million euros for the implementation of this project
“represents a decisive step towards making the dream of returning the River to everyone a reality”
The project includes the creation of an urban green park with the aim of monetising the proximity to the river
“It will be much more than a physical space
this valuable natural heritage that connects us to the past and projects us into the future
will finally be returned to the people so that everyone can enjoy its beauty
its serenity and its potential as a source of development and well-being”
the mayor revealed that a proposal to connect the city's railway station to the Santarém Plateau is underway
a “differentiating” project that aims to “bring Ribeira closer to Planalto
promote sustainable mobility by increasing the use of trains and with a significant impact on tourism”
The city hall intends to present these two initiatives on 19 March
with the release of images of both projects
Pescador Itaituba Miritituba - Vitor Shimomura/Brasil de Fato
a few meters from a green barge standing in a deep part of the river.
The barge is part of the mega-structure installed in the town to support the transportation of grains
the white lights of the Cargo Transshipment Stations (ECTs
where products are transferred from trucks to boats
in the district of Miritituba opposite Itaituba
The crossing from one side to the other is made by ferry
The journey takes half the time in small motorized boats (called "rabetas" in Brazil)
on the right bank of the Tapajós River
fisherman Ednaldo Ares dos Santos moored his boat on the morning of November 16
That was the last day to sell their fish before the beginning of the closed season when fishing and selling certain species are prohibited so that fish can reproduce safely.
since the arrival of the boats and the ports
this protection measure seems insufficient to preserve the river's fauna
a fish popularly known as piau and commonly found in the Tapajós has disappeared
"It's decreasing due to the flow of boats
This fish used to come up from there to here
Now it isn't coming up anymore," says the fisherman.
Santos was born into a family of fishing professionals and started fishing very young
he provided for the education of his three children
fishing is becoming increasingly difficult
The first station, owned by the Unitapajós joint venture – made up of agribusiness giants Bunge and Amaggi – was installed in 2013, according to the technical report Soy in the Northern Logistics Corridor, published in April 2024 by the Institute for Socio-Economic Studies (INESC
Then came three others belonging to agribusiness companies: Companhia Norte de Navegação e Portos (Cianport) and Cargill and Hidrovias do Brasil S.A
there is a floating ETC owned by Transportes Bertolini Ltda Group
cargo is distributed to private ports and shipped to other countries
We can't fish where we used to," says the fisherman
pointing to the area dominated by ports near the urban area of Miritituba
The companies cut down stretches of forest and limited access to the water to install the stations and ports
secretary of the Z 56 Fishermen's Colony
which serves around 400 fisherpeople from Itaituba and other towns in the region
the area controlled by the ports on the bank of the Tapajós River is almost a kilometer long
but it doesn't happen anymore," says Cruz
"We used to go there using our small boat
that's not possible," says retired fisherman Lázaro Joaquim da Silva
"There are people from here who go fishing in the town of Aveiro," he says
The combination of deforestation on the riverbank
and the restriction of bank access has resulted in losses for fisherpeople
Santos could secure up to 200 kilos of fish in three days of work
he returns home with just 40 kilos of fish
They lived in that area where gillnets were full of fish
we don't catch fish on the riverbank anymore
The decline has been drastic," explains Cruz
According to the Confederation of Agriculture and Livestock of Brazil
around 1,800 trucks carrying a total of around 84,000 tons of grain leave Sinop (in the state of Mato Grosso) in the direction of the Tapajós Axis
bound for the port of Santarém (in the state of Pará)
where they are unloaded and shipped abroad.
cargo from Mato Grosso is loaded onto barges that follow the Tapajós waterway until they meet the Amazonas River
"The ports were installed on a fish route
The consequence is that they fish less," says Cruz
people who made ends meet through fishing and fishing disappeared
and you don't see anyone," says Santos.
the Pará Public Prosecutor's Office filed a public civil action against the Pará State Secretariat for the Environment and Sustainability
the Secretariat for Ports of the Presidency of the Republic
the National Water Transport Agency (Antaq
in Portuguese) and the companies Rio Turia Serviços Logísticos
The document points out flaws in preparing the Environmental Impact Study and Report
and informed consultation with the communities impacted by the activities
In addition to the fisherpeople and riverbank dwellers who suffer from limited access to the river and a reduction in the amount of fish, the projects negatively impact the Munduruku Indigenous villages of Praia do Índio
in addition to damaging the flora and fauna
the developments could increase population and urban limits
threatening the villages close to the city
these communities may be affected by the noise of the boats
"The documents [the study and the report on environmental impacts] already prepared did not consider the existence of Indigenous villages and traditional communities affected by the Cargo Transshipment Stations project
neither the company nor public bodies have announced any intention to carry out prior consultation," the document states
and informed consultation is a mechanism for protecting traditional communities
It was established by Convention 169 of the International Labor Organization (ILO)
signed in 1989 and ratified by Brazil in 2002
This means that these populations have the right to monitor and take part in decisions about projects that impact their territories.
remembers a meeting when Cargill arrived on the territory
"But since we didn't understand much about the projects
the lawsuit indicates the failure of public bodies to carry out this process stage
"It so happens that Antaq and the state of Pará approved this project
and some of the companies involved began the licensing process without consulting the Indigenous and traditional populations about the impacts on their lives," the Public Prosecutor's Office document states
Cargill's port turned the beach into an abandoned area
Vessels departing from Miritituba are bound for the ports of Santana
and the Pará cities of Barcarena and Santarém
Cargill installed a large structure on Vera Paz beach in an area provided by Santarém's city hall
this was a leisure spot for residents and a sacred territory for Indigenous peoples and riverside dwellers
According to studies produced by the organization Terra de Direitos
the port has been operating for 20 years without environmental licensing
The mega grain disposal facility is on the left side of the waterfront
A concrete walkway connects the kiosks and a basketball court
Weeds grow through the cracks in the court's wall
and garbage accumulates in the surrounding undergrowth
it turned into that," says popular communicator Allan Hios
the profile Nostalgia Santarém publishes photos of the beach with trees and kiosks on clear sand
"You can't believe it used to be Vera Paz," wrote one Facebook user in a photo of three people playing in the greenish water
"What I see today is an accumulation of weeds in the area
so it looks abandoned," another user commented
president of the Santarém Rural Farmers' Union
lives in the rural community of Dourado on the river's opposite bank
she used to moor her canoe there to visit the city of Santarém
"Cargill's port has devastated our lives," Bastos laments
She says that the movement of the barges has taken away the tranquility of those who travel along the river
"The impact is violent."
She remembers when the beach was a meeting point for residents and a hotspot for small producers in the region
"Stallholders installed next to Vera Paz beach
were never compensated—workers who used to sell their products on the beach—ice pop
three other agribusiness companies are planning to install ports in the city
One of the projects is by Empresa Brasileira de Portos de Santarém (Embraps
whose environmental impact report was published in October 2015
The construction of other ports is intended to serve the activities of the Cevital Group from Algeria
which operates in the agri-food sector and is favored by plantations in Brazil's central-western region and the Ceagro company
Bastos was selling products at the Lower Amazon Family Production Fair (Fepam
He proudly showed off the fruit harvested in his community: bananas
“ We believed that everything belonged to us by right
We believed it because there had never been any conflict to take our land
That was the demarcation of respect,” she concludes.
Punjab CC Amadora vs Gorkha XI
Malo vs Oeiras
Punjab CC Amadora vs Lisbon Capitals
Malo vs Gamblers SC
Oeiras vs Lisbon Capitals
More than 30 trampoline and tumbling athletes will represent the country at the Santarem World Cup and Scalabis Cup in Santarem
Following the 2023 USA Gymnastics Championships
eight newly renamed Senior National Team members are set to compete at the Santarem World Cup July 1-2 in Portugal
individual trampoline champions Sarah Webster and Aliaksei Shostak headline a delegation that includes Olympian Nicole Ahsinger
reigning World double mini champion Ruben Padilla
2022 World team silver medalists Cody Gesuelli
Isaac Rowley and Jessica Stevens and 2021 double mini team champion Trinity Van Natta
Leah Garafalo and Ryan Maccagnan will join the team as traveling replacement athletes
July 1 with individual and synchronized trampoline qualifications beginning at 5 a.m
The top eight athletes and pairs from qualifications
More information about the World Cup can be found on the event website
The action in Portugal continues with the 2023 Scalabis Cup July 4-6
where 25 juniors and athletes in the 17-21 age group will participate in individual and double mini trampoline
Zachary Ramacci and Jace Williams will represent the 17-21 age-group athletes
Alexandra Mytnik and Alexander Rozenshteyn highlight the junior roster
Erkert and Miner will be joined by fellow juniors Asher Little
Competition in Santarem begins with two days of qualifications
each country will add the top three scores per division from their athletes in qualifications for a combined team score
Visit scalabiscup.com for more information about the competition in Portugal. Live scoring throughout the event will be available here
The full list of participants is listed below by competition and event
Challenger 2025 is scheduled to be played from March 29th to April 4th - at the Santarem Cricket Ground
Here are the Fantasy Cricket Predictions and Betting Tips for ECS Portugal
ECS Portugal Premier 2025 continues with Matches 16 to 20 on April 1st at Santarem Cricket Ground
Catch all the live streaming action and key highlights
ECS Portugal Premier 2025 continues with Matches 11 to 15 on March 31st at Santarem Cricket Ground
Tune in for ECS Portugal Premier 2025 action with Matches 6-10 scheduled on March 30
Watch live from Santarém Cricket Ground and stay updated with all match stats and results
Catch the action live from the ECS Portugal Premier 2025 as Matches 1-5 take place on March 29 at Santarém Cricket Ground
© ECN - European Cricket Network
Coimbra Knights vs Brothers XI Portugal
Team Tiger Portugal vs Friendship CC
Coimbra Knights vs Lisbon Super giants
Lisbon Werewolves vs Brothers XI Portugal
Friendship CC vs Lisbon Super giants
Catarina is a UK-based breaking news correspondent. She previously worked as a multimedia journalist in Portugal and Spain, where she covered everything from elections to natural disasters. Catarina has previous experience in TV and local journalism, co-founded a project telling the stories of Portuguese-speakers living in London, edited a youth-led news site and worked for several NGOs. She recently produced a documentary about transatlantic slavery and its legacies in today's society.
Coimbra Knights vs Brothers XI Portugal
Team Tiger Portugal vs Friendship CC
Coimbra Knights vs Lisbon Super giants
Lisbon Werewolves vs Brothers XI Portugal
Friendship CC vs Lisbon Super giants
Santarém
just an hour from Lisbon in the heart of Ribatejo region, is a dream for fans of architecture
Known as the ‘Gothic Capital’, it possesses so many Gothic monuments that it single-handedly provides a journey through various incarnations of the style
Throughout the historic centre of the city
no less than fifteen different churches provide a Gothic banquet
A good place to start is the Church of São João do Alporão, transformed into a Museum of Art and Archeology
Built in the 12th century by the Crusader Knights of Hospitaller or Malta Order
the Church bears the hallmarks of the Christian Reconquista and Romanesque style
Its squat cubic mass reflects the confidence and stability of an expanded Holy Roman Empire
But more ornate decoration and that telltale upward Gothic thrust towards the heavens are beginning
The ‘chevet’ (eastern end of the choir) is one of the first examples of Gothic style in Portugal
Santarém was perhaps uniquely ready to incorporate new Gothic elements like the pointed archways and decorative art that Crusaders would have seen in the East
Pointed archways had different load-bearing qualities to those of rounded Romanesque vaults (which had a tendency to push the load outward)
This adaptation allowed height ratios to increase from 2:1 to 3:1 and might have been particularly welcome in Santarém
a city built on a ridged plateau in an area of seismic activity
Continue to trace this development of the Gothic style from its simplest forms in the Igreja de Santa Clara
Here the austerity associated with the Order of St Clare is visible thanks to a restoration that took place in the 1940s
Interestingly the church doesn’t have a main door – only a side entrance – reflecting the fact that the Poor Clares are a closed order of nuns who have no public contact
In famous Igreja da Graça, a more flamboyant Gothic style is set against that mendicant Gothic simplicity
Around the church you can see places where carved motifs and Gothic tracery begin to be used to disguise any sense of weight in the structure
Another point of interest is that explorer Pedro Alvares Cabral
The Age of Discovery and its fashions brought further virtuoso Gothic elements
They came to be known as ‘Manueline’ after King Manuel I (1495-1521)
Stone pillars were carved into twists like sea-faring rope
Botanical and maritime features like oak leaves
Armillery spheres (used for navigation) can be spotted among the décor
as well as filigree work and other ‘foreign’ craftmanship
One of the clearest examples of Manueline Gothic can be seen in must-visit Igreja Marvila, whose interior is almost entirely swathed in decorative tiles.
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You’ll also see these hints of Manueline elements at São Francisco convent. It was originally built in a simple 13th century Mendicant style, but a hundred years later King D. Fernando decided he’d quite like to be buried there. He had a lower choir and a large cloister added. Spot the decorative tracery, including bearded heads and a representation of Aesop’s fable of the fox and grapes.
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Other stops on your Gothic pilgrimage could include the Churches of Santíssimo Milagre, Misericórdia, and São Nicolau. The historic centre of Santarém is a fun labyrinth of narrow and winding streets. Enjoy exploring them.
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make sure you get a look at the Cathedral before you go
‘Baroque’ comes from the Portuguese ‘perola barroca’ meaning ‘irregular pearl’ and also relates to anything absurdly complex
the Cathedral of Nossa Senhora da Conceição encapsulates the late Gothic move towards baroque layers of decoration
each ‘floor’ exaggeratedly ‘superposed’ on the other as it rises
marble inlays and trompe l’oeil frescoes are awe-inspiring – as intended
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Brazil — It was the first time in his life that Robson Chaves de Souza had seen the Tapajós River so far back from the shore
the sandy beach that divides his community and the river became a gaping expanse of parched mud
the land in the community remains parched and dusty
“This drought for us is the worst one ever,” he said
Souza lives in the Surucuá community in Tapajós-Arapiuns Extractive Reserve along the Tapajós River
a Brazilian Amazon region in the west of Pará state
Like other Indigenous and riverside communities in the area
they depend on the regular wet and dry seasons to plant fruits and vegetables for the coming months
“We always wait for October’s rain so we can clear our fields to plant something,” he said
“Now there are people who haven’t planted anything because the rain hasn’t come.”
but they all died because of the lack of rain,” he added
boats have run aground on sandbanks that have never appeared before
a local fisherman in Itaituba in the upper basin of the River Tapajós
that Indigenous communities living on the riverbanks became isolated and now have to walk up to 1 km (0.6 mi) to reach the waterways
“I’m 40 years old and a drought like this has never happened before,” he said
Droughts occur naturally in the Amazon Rainforest
a biome governed by one dry and one wet season per year
December marks the start of the rainy period
The water arriving in our region is coming from rain in other places far away
But the rain here isn’t enough to fill the river.”
The drought prompted Santarém, a city straddling the meeting point of the Tapajós and Amazon rivers, to declare a 90-day state of emergency Oct
5 after the drought compromised waterway transport and access to drinking water
The droughts have also had a major impact on people’s livelihoods and income
Raimundo Gilmar Farias da Costa looked across the Tapajós River as he stocked his boat with water and fruit for the day’s excursion
he makes his income by taking tourists to some of the most picturesque spots in Alter do Chão
a destination known for its seasonal white beaches in the middle of the rainforest
But some places along the river have been off-limits in the last few months
“The river dropped this year and stayed low
fishing is an important source of income in the region
fishing opportunities have become almost nonexistent after the river shrunk to unprecedented low levels
said local fisherman Dagio Odalison Correa
“The drought hurt many people because they had no work and no income,” he said
“It has become difficult to survive on fishing at the moment.”
about 300 km (186 mi) south down the river from Alter do Chão
the drought has impacted fishing in other ways
“It became very easy to catch fish because they get confined within lakes,” Albuquerque said
creating small lagoons between them as the river recedes
The abundance of fish gathered in small areas proved irresistible to some fishermen who caught large quantities of them
overfishing now could impact fish populations in the years to come
“This could delay or even prevent some aquatic species from reproducing,” Gustavo Hallwass
a researcher and professor at the Institute of Science
Technology and Innovation at the Federal University of Lavras
“The results of this severe drought will be felt in two or three years.”
8,188 fires were recorded compared to 4,507 in the same period last year (an 82% jump)
Pará has also had the highest number of fires this year compared with any other state in the Legal Amazon, registering 39,584 so far. Second behind Pará is Mato Grosso with 20,709 fires, closely followed by Amazonas, also devastated by droughts and fires
Most of the fires are linked to illegal deforestation
carelessness such as throwing cigarette ends on the ground and mismanagement of authorized fire use to clear vegetation in rural properties
which burn out of control under such dry conditions
This year’s extreme drought is largely aggravated by El Niño
a climate pattern influenced by the warming of surface waters in the eastern Pacific Ocean
experts say this El Niño is more severe than usual
“The magnitude of El Niño has been accentuated by climate change,” Hallwass said
Some locals expect the rain may only come as late as January
a delay that is already changing the Tapajós River ecosystem
gestured to the forest that encircled the houses in his community
He had only recently come back from spending several days in the forest
where he hunts for food and sleeps out in the open
“The humidity is different [in the forest],” he said
“We notice the dryness of the trees and the climate.”
“We notice our lips drying in the middle of the forest
Banner image: The 2023 severe drought in the Brazilian Amazon established record lows for rivers like the Negro (pictured) and the Tapajós
People and nature suffer as historic drought fuels calamitous Amazon fires
Ankush Kumar will be in the runs and wickets for Gamblers SC
with Nitin Kamboj adding some wickets
Gorkha XI will look to Suman Ghimire, Azhar Andani & Faruk Ahmed for the runs
with Shayaddur Rahman and Madhukar Thapa in the wickets
All-rounder Danish Siddique will be in the runs and wickets for Lisbon Capitals
Malo are full of top players so it's hard to pick from the bunch
I'd expect Amandeep Singh, Amir Zaib and Imran Khan to be in the runs
with Najam Shahzad and Assad Mehmood in the wickets
Conrad Greenshields and Francoise Stoman will be in the runs for Oeiras
whilst Junaid Khan will be in the wickets
Punjab CC Amadorawill look to Rao Imran and Simranjeet Singh for the runs
whilst Parveen Singh and Rana Sarwar will be in the wickets
Gorkha XI vs Gamblers SC
Oeiras vs Punjab CC Amadora
Gorkha XI vs Malo
Lisbon Capitals vs Gamblers SC
Punjab CC Amadora vs Malo
Punjab CC Amadora vs Gorkha XI
Malo vs Oeiras
Punjab CC Amadora vs Lisbon Capitals
Malo vs Gamblers SC
Oeiras vs Lisbon Capitals
Gorkha XI vs Gamblers SC
Oeiras vs Punjab CC Amadora
Gorkha XI vs Malo
Lisbon Capitals vs Gamblers SC
Punjab CC Amadora vs Malo
Oeiras vs Gamblers SC
Gorkha XI vs Lisbon Capitals
Punjab CC Amadora vs Gamblers SC
Gorkha XI vs Oeiras
Malo vs Lisbon Capitals
Oeiras CC vs Lisbon Capitals
Malo vs Gorkha 11
Gorkha 11 vs Oeiras CC
Malo vs Gorkha 11
Live Cricket Streaming ECS Portugal, Premier 2025: The live cricket streaming page which enables you to watch live cricket - Geo-restrictions apply
*NB these predictions may be changed nearer the start of the match once the final starting teams have been announced and we will be running ‘In-Play’ features
Santarem (Agenzia Fides) - "Be courageous and daring
opening yourselves with trust to the action of God who created everything
gave himself to us in Jesus Christ and inspires us with the Spirit to proclaim the Gospel with a new commitment and contemplate the beauty of creation
even more exuberant in these Amazonian lands
where we experience the luminous presence of the Risen One"
This is the exhortation that Pope Francis addressed to the participants of the Santarém meeting (IV Encontro da Igreja Católica na Amazônia Legal) which is taking place from June 6 to 9 in the same place that hosted the representatives of the Amazonian Churches in 1972
In addition to recalling the pastoral lines drawn at that time
the event also focuses on the application of the indications that emerged from the Synod for the Amazon
"This meeting in Santarém proposed lines of evangelization that marked the missionary action of the Amazonian communities and contributed to the formation of a solid ecclesial conscience"
The ideas of this meeting also served to shed light on the reflections of the Synod Fathers during the recent Synod for the Pan-Amazonian region..
we find the dreams for the Amazonia which were reaffirmed in the last Synod
I also rejoice in the commitment of the particular Churches of the Brazilian Amazon
to continue the indications of the last Synodal Assembly
through the beautiful and deep tradition of the meetings of the local Churches
of the experience of synodality - as an expression of communion
participation and mission - to which the whole Church is called"
The 4th Meeting of the Catholic Church in the Legal Amazon is held at the Saint Pius X Seminary in Santarém
and brings together around a hundred people
representatives indigenous peoples and traditional communities
According to the Archbishop of Cuiabá and second vice-president of the National Conference of Bishops of Brazil (CNBB)
the Catholic Church intends to commit itself to walking together
and to respond to today's challenges as shepherds close to the flock and challenged by the existential and geographical peripheries"
The beginning of the meeting was marked by the celebration of the Eucharist
presided over by the last ordained Bishop in the Brazilian Amazon
Coadjutor Bishop of the Diocese of Bragança
who invoked "the maternal intercession of Mary for all of us
where so many realities still need resurrection"
He then recalled that "the Cross for many of our brothers and sisters is still a reality every day
our people walk carrying a Cross on these paths
'an Amazon that has yet to complete its redemption'
The pilgrimage image of Nuestra Señora de Nazareth
The participants were welcomed by the local Archbishop
and by the president of the North region2 of the CNBB
who underlined the importance of the meeting held 50 years ago and of the document elaborated: "a great light for the trip to the Amazon"
called for the continuation of the process of a Church that presents itself more and more in the way of Jesus
September 8, 2015JPEG
An astronaut looked south from the International Space Station to capture this broad view of the winding
brown Amazon River as it flows east (lower right to upper left) across Brazil
Thin levees mark the main course of the river
with much of the floodplain occupied by lakes
which is in striking contrast with the dark blue of the Tapajós River
Amazon water is light brown because it carries vast quantities of fine sediment that is eroded from the high Andes Mountains
more than 2,000 kilometers (1,200 miles) upstream to the west
The water in the Tapajós is clear because it drains out of the low rainforest and carries almost no sediment
The spot where the Tapajós meets the Amazon resembles a great lake or estuary dammed behind a thin levee
Water from the Amazon leaks into the Tapajós here
This pattern of clear rivers dammed by levees of the muddy Amazon is common
The city of Santarém sits near the point where the Amazon and the Tapajós meet
Because rivers are the highways of the Amazon basin
The largest river on Earth (the Amazon) allows ocean-going ships to dock at the city’s port even though the port lies 600 kilometers (400 miles) from the Atlantic Ocean
the port facility was enhanced to allow for soybean processing
The result has been a change in local land use from pasture to soy farming
The deforested zones of farms and cattle pasture appear on both sides of the image
Santarém also has river access to hundreds of miles of forest to the south via the Tapajós River
View this area in EO Explorer
Two rivers meet near the port city of Santarém in the interior of Brazil
The impact of severe drought on the Negro River
and other rivers in the basin is dramatically evident in this pair of images
which show that every body of water has shrunk in 2010 compared to 2008
Heavy sediment loads play a role in making it one of the most sinuous rivers in the Amazon Basin
Most of the sediment that flows into the Atlantic Ocean from the mouth of the river comes from thousands of miles upstream
the waters of the Amazon surrounded the villages near its confluence with the Negro River
seeping into the cleared land and filling what had been pale green angular shapes with murky brown water
Por un futuro en el que los humanos vivan en armonía con la naturaleza
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While still a graphic designer at heart with a passion for branding and editorial design
today Thiago works at the intersection of design
technology and strategy as a senior product designer at Performance Art Toronto
architecture and accessibility to turn complex ideas into simple and usable products
and has been doing so for the past 10+ years for projects including BMW's Hofmeister Kink
Petro-Canada's 24 Hours of Care and SKYN's Pleasure Parallel
Q> Tell us about your current role and design specialism(s)?
Thiago> I am a designer at Performance Art
specialising in digital product design and learning a bunch of things
Q> What drew you to design in the first place
Thiago> I never thought about design when I was younger
but I’ve always felt this pull toward creating things
I tried my hand at creating comic books and notebook covers.
I learned CorelDRAW and started designing t-shirts and covers for other people’s work
I learned how to code websites and learned Flash ActionScript
I was freelancing as a front-end developer for an agency
I got accepted into an architecture program but I decided that I didn’t want to pursue it
I started university in one of the programs that people in Brazil used to say was “good if you didn’t know what you wanted to do.” It was advertising.
I started working at a print shop and that’s where the term graphic design started to make sense to me
I remember watching the printers running with vibrant colours and glow-in-the-dark Pantones
I met a guy while he was proofing some prints
and I started talking to him about his work
He told me he was an art director for a “big ad agency.” That was the moment it hit me: I had always known what I wanted to do — I just didn’t know the name
I quit my job the next day and went to work for a digital ad agency as a front-end developer
and that’s when I became obsessed with art direction
I decided to move to another country and jumped on a plane four days after graduating from university
After three more years of school in a new country (Canada)
I restarted my career as a junior designer
Q> What aspects of design do you get really nerdy about personally
Thiago> I always like to learn how things work
The best analogy I can think of is my very limited experience at the gym: I need to know where the pain is to target that area
When I think about digital product design specifically
I like to see how those items can come together and coexist in something live
like a website or app versus a magazine or poster
we also need to think about a lot of new subjects
I get really into how typography is created
how the art direction of a website or app is developed
and how that product is solving a problem or communicating a message
Q> There are so many new design tools out — what tools do you like to use and why
(whether digital platforms or old-fashioned pen and paper!)
Thiago> I mostly like to use whatever is best for the job
and I still use all of the Adobe Suite (until it becomes Adobe Figma
then I’ll just be using Adobe *rolls eyes*)
but I’m constantly looking for new platforms
I tend to be somewhat of an early adopter when it comes to new software that interests me
so I’m always on the lookout for new tools
I’ve been really digging Spline to experiment with 3D and ProtoPie for more high-fidelity prototypes
Here are some tools I enjoy using on a daily basis:
Figma/FigJam for everything product design
Webflow for building websites and mockups of web-based work
ProtoPie for high-fidelity and more complex prototyping
After Effects and Photoshop mostly to create GIFs and memes I send to people
Thiago> I only really think about design thinking when I need to mentor or explain something to a junior designer
a teammate from another department or a client
But using design thinking as a core framework to teach people how to be creative and how to generate ideas and validate those ideas is a great way to introduce the complexity of a creative project to someone who is not as experienced at being creative
It can be a very efficient way of defining
especially if your company works with 5-to-10-day sprints
which are the perfect application of design thinking
Many companies such as The Sexy Beast and Cubo are using this framework
Q> What are the most persistent misconceptions about your particular design specialism that you see across the advertising and marketing landscape
Thiago> It’s this idea that we are only creating cool websites
we are creating digital products that people use
We just happen to be advertising something.” I believe “cool websites” were a thing back when the user wasn’t considered — when Flash websites were still a thing and accessibility requirements were overlooked
when good experiences were based only on how creative and pretty the work was
there’s still a lot of this thinking going around
The other misconception that drives me crazy is the thinking that digital can be treated as an afterthought
I’ve seen and experienced this in a few agencies
which always comes down to “let’s add some banners here and say that this is our digital strategy.” Brands should know by now that digital is a major part of their ecosystem
It’s a key component to creating and establishing customer loyalty
growing and scaling a business and tapping directly into culture
Why can’t some creatives and/or agencies not see that
LBB> Accessible design is an increasingly prominent topic — from your experience
what are the most challenging facets of accessible design
And what does best practice in accessible design in your particular design specialism look like
Thiago> There are a couple of challenges
It’s often hard to convince clients that accessibility is an important topic
the response too often is “we’ll worry about that later.” But when you show how much money a brand could lose if they don’t adhere to accessibility standards
it suddenly becomes the most important topic at the table
Accessibility should be at the core of an organization
it shouldn’t be something we just fix or create a short-term solution for
The second challenge is actually creating a culture of training and learning about accessibility and compliance
There are many tools that can be used to educate on accessibility
and while it’s not the most glamorous topic
it is extremely important. We are still in a culture of awards for craft
and even though there has been a great shift towards creating more accessible
I still think we have a long way to go in terms of learning
and practicing introducing accessibility into our daily work
Best practices for accessible design is a broad topic for a relatively short article
it’s the practice of thinking not only about how the technical side works — such as semantic tags
colour blindness and responsive design — but also going further into understanding not only visible disabilities
but more nuanced aspects of accessibility like neurodivergence
We must ask ourselves how we can use art direction to show diversity and inclusivity
and further understand our users/customers and their requirements at the individual level
LBB> What design controversies or challenges do you find trickiest to navigate or do you find yourself thinking about most frequently
Thiago> The belief that design (or creativity) is an innate talent
I often think back about feedback I’ve received and things I’ve heard said to other creatives
“who the hell put you in a position to lead people?”
I find the idea of being born good at something abhorrent
We need to shift the conversation from praising so-called “pure talent” to admiring curiosity
You might catch yourself driving someone away from a great career because you have no patience to mentor them
We need to create a culture of mentorship for the new generation of designers and also be willing to learn from them
LBB> How do you think about the ethics of design
Thiago> I still think it’s a big dark grey area
accessibility while also forcing users to make the choices we want by using dark patterns in UX
We are trying to convince people to live more minimally while we are cramming the internet with more products and selling goods people don’t need
We are discussing important issues like global warming and sustainability while we are printing posters and plastering them all over the city.
Ethics will always be a topic of conversation
and designers will always face questions and dilemmas in their careers
Do I create something that goes against my personal values but helps my company grow
knowing that it doesn’t meet accessibility standards
The right answer should always follow the lines of “do the right thing even when no one is looking.” But we know that life is a grey area
I could list a range of things wrong with how products
My dream car is a gas-powered Mini Cooper Countryman
Each of us needs to find what matters to us and how we can make everything better in our own way
Perhaps I care about global warming while a friend doesn’t
but they care a lot about homelessness and do something to tackle that issue
LBB> What are some of your favourite examples of creative design solutions that inspire you
Thiago> I don’t have a lot of specific examples of creative solutions
but it’s always interesting to see how people solve problems with existing designs
Whenever I’m scrolling through Instagram or TikTok
and improve on existing features of something designed with a specific function (I love when they fail too)
Some recent examples include using a mason jar as a bullet blender
using a spoon to make a dent in flour instead of filling the spoon itself — even 3D printing custom drawers to fit office tools
or equipping two Roombas with plastic cups to create an intense game of beer pong. I guess creative design solutions to me are more so about how people use something (product
LBB> Which design projects throughout your career have been the most satisfying to work on and why
Thiago> I always like working with small clients
I think it shows us how truly resourceful we can be when we don’t have millions of dollars or a 20-person team to get something done
Working with mom-and-pop shops is always very satisfying because it’s a bit of a break from the very structured
But I am also not going to lie and say that I don’t have fun working with big brands
I’ve had the opportunity to work with great brands
and some of the most satisfying work I’ve done throughout my career includes the Petro Canada CareMakers Foundation’s 24 Hours of Care
which was done in partnership with McCann Canada
the new (at the time) website for Ronald McDonald’s House Charities Canada
which demanded a great deal of effort from the team to complete
I’ve had a lot of fun creating work for Lyft
which has allowed me to be a bit freer from some constraints on other clients
LBB> What’s going on at the moment in design that’s getting you particularly excited
I love the idea of being able to go to market sooner as well as empowering people with ideas to create something and without needing to spend thousands of dollars on a prototype
This whole movement is spearheaded by platforms like Webflow
and can finally give users and business owners the tools to make and design a product that works for them.
Creatives are able to use AI and its ability to automate certain tasks to have more time to be creative
While a lot of professionals are afraid of losing their jobs to AI — which is a real concern — I think that we are at a magical moment where we can either learn how to use it to our advantage or let it scare us into paralysis
Thiago> I wouldn’t say I have many design heroes
I used to have this fascination with heavy metal and rock bands and I knew everything about all of them
I just lost the close contact I had with that part of my life
I stopped fanboying over design legends and started paying attention to people around me
there will always be some of my go-tos when looking for references like Jon Contino
I try to find heroes in people around me and absorb anything I can from them
I’ve met plenty of great designers and art and creative directors throughout my career
LBB> Thinking of people at the beginning of their careers
what advice would you give them for navigating this constantly changing field
but having a lot of information in your brain will help you adapt and grow and give you a better chance of asking the right questions
It usually helps me feel better about what I know versus what I don’t
Start with those instead of asking “when is it due?”
you don’t need to prove yourself every day
The rest is the consequence of what you put in
Interview with two travel nurses: https://nurse.org/articles/travel-nurse-pay-off-debt-rv/
I had the wonderful opportunity to go to Santarém
Brazil for one month to learn about another country’s healthcare and experience a new culture
It was the perfect mixture of learning and serving
We visited many different healthcare services located in Santarém: clinics
an epidemiological research center of tropical diseases
an herbal and holistic health treatment center
These are just some of the many services provided in Santarém; there are also private healthcare clinics that we did not visit
It was shocking to see the Municipal Hospital so over-crowded
There were minimal patient rooms available
and hundreds of people waiting in the ER for a bed
this is the only hospital available for immediate care
as the Regional Hospital only has 150 beds and requires referrals (typically critical cases from the Municipal Hospital)
Visiting these public hospitals and clinics will impact my future nursing career by making me appreciate my coworkers
we met a nurse that was responsible for 36 Med-Surg patients
Although she was working alone on the unit and there is typically another nurse present
she shared that typically nurses are responsible for 20-35 patients
This was shocking to me and will impact my future nursing career when nurse: patient ratios are off and I am caring for 6+ patients and stressed
This was not the only unit where there was overcrowding of patients and not enough nurses
it amazed me to see how well the available nurses worked to care for their patients
They worked together and accomplished goals
The Municipal Hospital is also short-staffed of doctors; doctors visit the units (non-ICU) only once per day
this leaves a lot of responsibility for the nurses
It was inspiring to see the nurses care for the patients; they provided healthcare
plus did several “doctor” responsibilities (although outside of nursing realm in the US
it is allowed in Brazil) including prescribing medications
This will impact my future nursing career by reminding me of the many roles a nurse can play for a patient
and that I will likely have the opportunity to form the closest relationship with a patient as a nurse
My experience in Brazil was eye-opening in so many ways
My time in Santarém made me acknowledge how I take healthcare for granted
I live minutes away from a distinguished and technologically advanced hospital
there are countless options to choose from
I have easy access to healthcare and treatment is available 24/7
We visited multiple river communities during our trip
Several rural river communities neighboring Santarém typically receive monthly healthcare visits by a team on a boat
there are conflicts between city hall and a local university over this health boat
the health boat has not visited many of these river communities since October
One specific community that we visited had a nurse who lived there and served people from surrounding communities too
but the communities have not seen a doctor in months unless they took their own boat several hours away to Santarém
I was very frustrated with the “politics” that was preventing the perfectly-working boat from serving people
After seeing the lack of healthcare in these rural river communities
I had a better understanding of what it is like for rural Americans as well
As a future nurse likely working in Morgantown
I will see many patients from rural areas who may not have frequent access to and availability of healthcare
It will be my responsibility to educate both how to prevent illnesses and manage current diseases
I saw firsthand how important the role of the nurse is
especially because visits from doctors are infrequent
The nurse has a vital role in primary prevention efforts because treatment and healthcare access is minimal
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a nonchalant middle school teacher who is always late
doesn't imagine she'll make it her life-long career
Today is the Day Against Violence and Julia doesn't pay attention when 15-year-old Ethan tries to confide in her
Trip to Santarém recounts the story of her path toward listening
as well as representatives based in the U.S
The organisation currently brings together more than 1,000 French cinema and TV content professionals (producers
etc.) working together to promote French films and TV programmes among foreign audiences
The rainforest is starting to release its carbon
Photographs by Dado Galdieri/Hilaea Media for Nature
Video by Patrick Vanier/Hilaea Media for Nature
deforestation and other human threats are driving the Amazon towards the limits of survival
Researchers are racing to chart its future
The Pulitzer Center in Washington DC supported travel for Daniel Grossman and for photographer Dado Galdieri and videographer Patrick Vanier
This article is also available as a pdf version
Luciana Gatti stares grimly out of the window of the small aircraft as it takes off from the city of Santarém
the plane passes over a 30-kilometre stretch of near-total ecological devastation
filled with emerald-green corn stalks and newly clear-cut plots where the rainforest once stood
a climate scientist at the National Institute for Space Research in São José dos Campos
Gatti is part of a broad group of scientists attempting to forecast the future of the Amazon rainforest
The land ecosystems of the world together absorb about 30% of the carbon dioxide released by burning fossil fuels; scientists think that most of this takes place in forests
and the Amazon is by far the world’s largest contiguous forest
Rows of black-pepper plants grow in a field near Santarém that was formerly rainforest
Gatti has collected air samples over the Amazon in planes such as this one
to monitor how much CO2 the forest absorbs
she reported data from 590 flights that showed that the Amazon forest’s uptake — its carbon sink — is weak over most of its area1
transforming the climate across a vast swathe of the Amazon2
closed-canopy forest would no longer exist
Gatti’s observations seem to show the early signs of what he forecast
A dealership for the farming equipment company John Deere sits at the edge of the rainforest in Santarém
“What we were predicting to happen perhaps in two or three decades is already taking place,” says Nobre
who was one of a dozen co-authors of the paper with Gatti
where the Tapajós River joins the Amazon River
to join Gatti and other scientists trying to determine whether the forest is heading for an irreversible transformation towards a degraded form of savannah
Another big question is whether the forest can still be saved by slowing climate change
halting Amazon deforestation and restoring its damaged lands
The large-scale deforestation we saw from the air is the most visible threat to the Amazon
an ecologist at the University of Oxford and Lancaster University
has found that even intact forest is no longer as healthy as it once was
because of forces such as climate change and the impacts of agriculture that spill beyond farm borders
reported that such changes were having effects across 38% of the intact Amazon forest3
Gatti first visited Santarém in the late 1990s
when most of the farming in this part of the Amazon was practised by smallholders for subsistence purposes
she’s astounded by the scale of destruction that has ravaged the jungle
Gatti’s voice crackles over the plane’s intercom
“They are killing the forest to transform everything into soy beans.”
The plane that collects air samples for Gatti is housed in a cavernous hangar at Santarém airport
she visits the hangar to meet with Washington Salvador
Gatti checks on the rugged plastic suitcases she has had shipped to Santarém and stored in her tiny office at the airport
are 12 sturdy glass flasks the size and shape of one-litre soft-drink bottles
Luciana Gatti (right) prepares for a flight that will collect air samples over the Amazon forest
Climate scientist Luciana Gatti stands at the top of a tower above the canopy
watching one of the aeroplanes that collects air samples over the forest
Luciana Gatti discusses threats to the rainforest
The problem is that we are advancing a lot in deforestation
There is a moratorium that is not being obeyed
When we compare the size of the deforested area from 2010 to 2018 and look at the years 2019 and 2020
which were part of the Bolsonaro government
we see an increase in 70% of planted areas for soy
Gatti doesn’t need to accompany Salvador when he collects the samples
because she gets air sick flying in small planes
The pilots who work with her fly twice a month to a specific sampling location
Once they reach an altitude of 4,420 metres over a landmark
opening valves and turning on a compressor that fills the first flask with air taken through a nozzle from outside
sometimes barely 100 metres above the ground
In her laboratory at the National Institute for Space Research
Gatti measures the amount of CO2 in the samples
She calculates how much the forest soaks up (or releases) by comparing her measurements with those taken over the Atlantic Ocean
which is upstream of the trade winds that blow over the Amazon
This patch of the rainforest in the eastern Amazon has been carved up into an array of fields
(Video contains the sound of an aeroplane engine)
Flasks used for sampling air above the rainforest
Luciana Gatti and her colleagues use these samples to determine how carbon dioxide moves into and out of the forest
an atmospheric scientist at Colorado State University in Fort Collins who has collaborated with Gatti
says that her research has been an “amazingly logistically difficult project”
is that she’s done it over and over and over again
Air samples taken over the Amazon rainforest at five sites (orange dots) track the movement of carbon dioxide into and out of the forest between 2010 and 2018
By measuring the total flow of carbon (black) and subtracting that released by fires (grey)
researchers calculate the net flux (orange)
Negative values indicate carbon sinks — areas that absorb more than they naturally emit
Nature publications remain neutral with regard to contested jurisdictional claims in published maps
A trio of grain silos stands near the edge of Santarém
Brazil’s Forest Code is supposed to protect the country’s woods
One key provision requires that in the Amazon
But many scientists and forest activists argue that lax enforcement makes it too easy to circumvent the law
and that fines for not complying aren’t effective deterrents because they are rarely paid
people often get title to public or Indigenous land that they illegally occupy and clear
an ecologist at Brazil’s National Institute for Research in Amazonia in Manaus
“Brazil is basically the only country where you can still go into the forest and start clearing and expect to come out with a land title
It’s like the Wild West of North America in the eighteenth century.”
After a one-hour drive south from Santarém
we meet the Indigenous chief — the cacique — of the tiny village of Açaizal in the reservation known as Terra Munduruku do Planalto
He sits on a deck at a rough-hewn wooden table
positioned so he can watch for unwanted outsiders who might drive past
his surname is the same as his tribe — says that decades ago
non-Indigenous homesteaders began establishing smallholdings on land that he and his ancestors had occupied for generations
He says that they built houses and opened up cattle pastures without ever asking permission or obtaining legal rights
Previous generations of his community didn’t object
“Our parents did not have this type of understanding — they were not concerned about it,” he says
The land eventually ended up in the hands of commercial growers
who buy up adjacent plots then raze huge swathes of jungle
“They do not care about these trees from which we extract medicine
He says that his community has tried unsuccessfully to get help from the government to recover some of the land
Maize (corn) grows in a field in the Munduruku territory next to intact rainforest
A farmer harvests a field in a deforested area near Santarém
The high value of some tropical hardwoods also threatens the forest
a timber-mill worker sends a massive log through an industrial saw
which slices off a plank as thick as an encyclopedia
Other workers shape the rough board into standard dimensions
came to the state of Pará from Mato Grosso state 17 years ago
“We came to Pará because there was plenty of virgin forest left,” he says
The situation in Mato Grosso is different: since the mid-1980s
roughly 40% of its rainforest has been cut down4
Veronese’s mill saws up about 2,000 giant trees
mostly for high-end flooring and porch decks in the United States and Europe
he says that he takes only “sustainably harvested” wood
come from state-regulated logging operations that practise selective logging
leaving the remaining trees to grow and fill gaps in the canopy
And he says that his company follows the government’s rules for selective logging
which require firms to take steps to reduce their impact
But many ecologists say that the selective logging permitted by the Forest Code is often not sustainable
That’s because the trees that are removed are generally slow-growing species with dense wood
whereas the species that grow back have less-dense wood
so they absorb less carbon in the same space
And few companies follow the requirements for selective logging
such as limiting road construction or the number of trees cut
“About 90% of selective logging in the Amazon is estimated as illegal
and therefore doesn’t follow any of these procedures,” says Berenguer
A sawmill processes logs from the rainforest on the outskirts of Santarém
It takes patience and perseverance to monitor the Amazon for long periods
Berenguer and her team have been measuring 6,000 trees in the Tapajós National Forest every three months since 2015
they estimate changes in the amount of biomass in the forest
and atmospheric measurements such as Gatti’s
are two common techniques climate scientists use to study the uptake and release of carbon
The censuses directly measure the amount of carbon (in the form of wood) in a forest
If paired with measurements of debris on the ground and CO2 released from soil
But censuses look only at a limited number of sites
Atmospheric measurements can assess the combined impact of changes in forests at regional and even continental scales
But it’s hard to decipher the cause of any changes they show
Berenguer began monitoring more than 20 plots in and around the Tapajós forest
Her goal was to compare the carbon uptake of primary forest with that of jungle degraded by selective logging — legal and otherwise
an unprecedented heat wave and drought hit the eastern Amazon
killing hundreds of trees that she’d measured at least twice
She recalls the day in 2015 that she visited a recently scorched plot
Tree number 114 is burning,’” Her equipment was destroyed
“I just collapsed crying; just sat down in the ashes.”
But by the time this long dry season ended
fires had scorched one million hectares of primary forest in the eastern Amazon
killing an estimated 2.5 billion trees and producing as much CO2 as Brazil releases from burning fossil fuels in a year5
she saw the chance to study a problem that is expected to become increasingly common: the combined effect of multiple issues
fires and human degradation caused by selective logging and clear-cutting
A patch of former rainforest in the Munduruku territory has been cleared of trees and will be burnt before it is planted
The impacts and fires spread into the rainforest beyond the edge of the field
On a tour of where Berenguer’s team works in the Tapajós forest
The forest has grown back with plenty of vegetation
including some fast-growing species that are already as thick as telephone poles
But there are none of the giants that can be found elsewhere in the forest
Alves and Oliveira take Gatti and me to a site three kilometres up the highway that has never been selectively logged or clear cut
It’s dimmer here because the high canopy is so thick
And it’s noticeably cooler: not only do the trees block sunlight
but they also transpire vast quantities of water
Gatti marvels at the size of a Brazil-nut tree (Bertholletia excelsa) that forms part of the canopy
How much water this tree puts into the air.”
Luciana Gatti stands between the buttresses of a giant samauma tree (Ceiba pentandra)
which she often visits on trips to the eastern Amazon
Berenguer and a team of co-authors from Brazil and Europe published a study5 of carbon uptake and tree mortality in her plots during the first three years after the 2015–16 burning
They compared plots that had been selectively logged or had burnt in the years before 2015–16
with ones that had not been logged or burnt
The study found that more trees died in degraded plots
Although plots that weren’t degraded fared the best in her study
Berenguer says that there is no such thing as “pristine forest” any more
Climate change has warmed the entire Amazon forest by 1 °C in the past 60 years
Amazon rainfall has not changed appreciably
where dry-season rainfall decreased by 34% between 1979 and 20181
the season now lasts about 4 weeks longer than it did 40 years ago
the measurable effects of climate change on the forest are relatively subtle compared with those of direct human impacts such as logging
an Earth-system modeller at Brazil’s University of Campinas
says that deforestation alone can’t explain why the Amazon carbon sink has weakened — and has reversed in the southeast
published an analysis this year noting that carbon emissions resulting from degradation equal — or exceed — those from clear-cutting deforestation3
The area of intact Amazon forest that has been degraded by different forces exceeds the area that has been deforested by clear-cutting
Three main drivers of degradation are fires
selective timber extraction and edge effects that harm the forest near areas that have been cleared or burnt
Severe droughts can also cause degradation
5.5% of total remaining Amazon forest degraded
even intact forest with no obvious local human impacts is accumulating less carbon than it used to
A 2015 analysis6 of 321 plots of Amazon primary forest with no overt human impacts reported “a long-term decreasing trend of carbon accumulation”
A similar study7 published in 2020 reported the same things in the Congo Basin forest — the world’s second-largest tropical jungle
when censuses indicated that such primary forest in the Amazon was storing more carbon
There is no consensus explanation for these slowdowns
or why primary forest was accumulating carbon
But many researchers suspect that the carbon gains in previous decades stem from the influence of extra CO2 in the atmosphere
In some studies that expose large forest plots to elevated CO2
known as free-air carbon enrichment (FACE) experiments
researchers have measured gains in biomass
But this effect lasted only a few years in one experiment8
and other studies have not yet determined whether the gains are temporary
All of the forest FACE experiments have so far been conducted in temperate regions
And many scientists suspect that tropical forests — and the Amazon
in particular — might follow different rules
The first tropical-forest FACE experiment is finally under construction
Nobre says that it could help to predict whether continued increases in CO2 will benefit the Amazon
Nobre and his students have used computer models to forecast how climate change and deforestation will affect the Amazon
from work in the 1970s showing that the Amazon forest itself helps to create the conditions that nourish it9
Moisture blowing in from the Atlantic falls as rain in the eastern Amazon and is then transpired and blown farther west
It recycles several times before reaching the Andes
A smaller or seriously degraded forest would recycle less water
and eventually might not be able to support the lush
In their 2016 study2, Nobre and several colleagues estimated the Amazon would reach a tipping point if the planet warms by more than 2.5 °C above pre-industrial temperatures and if 20–25% of the Amazon is deforested. The planet is on track to reach 2.5 °C of warming by 2100, according to a report released by the United Nations last October
Nobre now wonders whether his earlier study was too conservative
“What Luciana Gatti’s paper shows is that this whole area in the southern Amazon is becoming a carbon source.” He is convinced that
although the Amazon is not at the tipping point yet
director of the Max Planck Institute of Biogeochemistry in Jena
is not a fan of using the term tipping point
But she says that the forest’s future is in question
“We all think of a tipping point as it’s going to happen and it’s going to happen fast
I have a feeling that it’s going to be a gradual alteration of the ecosystem that we know is coming with climate change,” she says
Regardless of whether the change will be fast or slow
Trumbore agrees with the majority of scientists who study the Amazon that it is facing serious challenges that might have global ramifications
Luciana Gatti climbs a tower that rises above the canopy in the rainforest
Some of those challenges are directly linked to politics in the region
Gatti and her colleagues reported that assaults on the Amazon — including deforestation
burning and degradation — had increased dramatically in 2019 and 2020 as a result of declines in law enforcement
And that doubled the carbon emissions from the region10
The fate of the Amazon is on Gatti’s mind as she climbs a lattice tower in the Tapajós forest — one of the landmarks her pilots fly over as they collect air samples
The metal structure rattles and creaks as she ascends
she gazes at the forest spreading in all directions out to the horizon
“We are killing this ecosystem directly and indirectly,” she says
“This is what scares me terribly and why it’s affecting me so much when I come here
Trees in the rainforest pump tremendous amounts of water vapour into the atmosphere through the process of evapotranspiration. Cleared land releases much less moisture
Daniel Grossman is a freelance reporter in Watertown
Correction: A photo caption in an earlier version of this feature erroneously described a farmer as preparing a field near Santarém for planting
Santarém has been put forward as a candidate city to relieve the capacity problems at Lisbon’s Humberto Delgado airport. Named after Fernão de Magalhães, Portuguese navigator and explorer, Magellan500 was developed by a consortium of private Portuguese business interests in collaboration with local bodies
Magellan500 forecasts 50 million passengers
An alternative to Lisbon airport has been talked about since 1969
31.1 million passengers passed through Humberto Delgado airport
Magellan500 was presented in late November of 2022
storage and transport centers for hydrogen for aviation and renewable energy production parks
with the promoters stressing that it is essential to use sustainable fuels to reduce the project’s environmental impacts
It’s a strategic project that will become an asset to Santarém
the Lisbon Metropolitan Area and to the entire Center region
The last phase of the Porto-Lisbon high speed line depends on the location of the future airport in the capital
however the current plan does not include Santarém
since the last phase only leaves open the construction of the new line through Montijo or Alcochete
Portugal’s Government has not revealed any preference for the moment about any of the alternatives
There is a solution in which Humberto Delgado Airport remains as the main airport and Montijo as complementary; a second in which Montijo progressively acquires the status of main and Humberto Delgado as complementary; a third in which Alcochete fully replaces Humberto Delgado Airport; a fourth in which Alcochete will be the main airport and Santarém the complementary one
and a fifth in which Santarém fully replaces Humberto Delgado
There’s been some dissent regarding the potential new location of the airport
The mayors of Porto and Lison do not see with favorable the solution of having the airport in Santarém
“There is no European city with a main airport 85 kilometers away,” said Carlos Moedas
“To have a reliable connection at such a distance is a big challenge.”
the house is sited along the perimeter of its plot
receiving distant views of the natural context
the team at dp arquitectos organizes the dwelling with service areas consolidated along its northern end
private spaces including bedroom along the southern facing end
image by ivo tavares studio
dp arquitectos organizes the centralized shared spaces of its house in santarém to broadly face a large patio and swimming pool
the team seeks to maintain an element of privacy alongside this openness
and to generate an harmonious relationship between the built space and its surrounding context
the volumes and elevations of the santarém house are organized as a visual reference along the main road axis which runs through site.
in contrast to environmental insensitivity of its neighboring plots
the project respects and maintains the pre-existing trees
the team celebrates the valuable shade of their canopies under the intense heat of the ribatejo
the team strives for an atmosphere that is comfortable and simple
the team notes: ‘the search for simplicity is a complex process.’
project title: casa em santarém
architecture: dp arquitectos
photography: ivo tavares studio
AXOR presents three bathroom concepts that are not merely places of function
but destinations in themselves — sanctuaries of style
The Sanctuary's rector supports the Santarém alternative since he believes it is the best alternative for Fátima
endorsed Santarém as the site for the future international airport
arguing that it is the greatest option for the millions of pilgrims and tourists that come to visit Fátima and the central region of Portugal each year
the Santarém hypothesis is the one that most pleases.”
The rector also mentioned how concerned he is that “the remaining options move the airport away from the Central Region and Fátima”
emphasising that the Sanctuary “will continue to monitor this process
always with the aim of defending the best options for Fátima”
more than 6.8 million people visited the Sanctuary
which according to Carlos Cabecinhas justifies the need for an airport in Santarém
In the opening session of the International Religious Tourism Workshops
the new airport was also a topic under discussion
the mayor of the Chamber of Ourém stating that “the construction of the new airport in Santarém constitutes an opportunity to boost tourist and economic activity for the region and the country.” Along the same line
vice-president of the Regional Tourism Entity of Central Portugal
argued that “it would be in the Centre of Portugal that the airport structure should be built
More than 260 international buyers and suppliers from the tourism sector
from 40 countries are going to participate in the International Workshops organized by the president of ACISO (Business Association Ourém-Fátima)
This edition's workshop agenda includes around 5,000 brief interactions/meetings amongst agents within the industry
The initiative's goals are to strengthen the importance of religious tourism in the context of the global tourist industry
foster a network of commercial ties among participants
and position Portugal as a preferred destination for religious tourism abroad
Maybe an earthquake or a tsunami would compel authorities to build a new airport
it is quite obvious for anyone with a brain that no new airport will be built in Lisbon
Somewhere near Coimbra would be ideal as it is equidistant from Lisbon and Porto
What's taking these ditherers so long
I could be forgiven for thinking they're just waiting for the EU to pay for it
← →
Kokoró Mekranotire has watched with dismay as outsiders have laid waste to ever-larger swaths of his Kayapó homeland
and land grabbers have streamed illegally into and around the Indigenous territory
a 40,000-square-mile expanse of forest the size of South Korea
The patch of forest where Mekranotire used to collect Brazil nuts — a dense canopy of deep golden-brown trees standing almost 100 feet tall — was stripped
Loggers have repeatedly entered Kayapó land
“Those trees never should have been touched,” says Mekranotire, now 49 and working for the Kabu Institute
a nonprofit that helps protect Kayapó land and develop sustainable businesses among its people
“We had to fight to hold onto our land and let more trees grow.”
Outsiders started arriving in droves in the 1970s with the opening of the federal BR-163 highway, which stretches 1,320 miles from Cuiabá in south-central Brazil to Santarém in the heart of the Amazon. BR-163 parallels Kayapó land and was fully paved by 2020
with the highway providing easy access for millions of tons of the commodity crop to reach Brazilian ports
The paving also provided much easier outside access to two important Kayapó reserves, Menkragnoti and Baú, measuring more than 18,000 square miles and 6,000 square miles
Illegal loggers and miners who used to arrive in a trickle
“The kuben [white men] already had a lot of experience; they knew exactly what they were doing,” he says
They told us the highway wouldn’t affect us
as Brazil’s nationalist President Jair Bolsonaro continues his push to legalize a broad range of economic and extractive activities on Indigenous land
plans are underway for a railway to help transport soybeans from the region’s burgeoning number of farms
And even though the Kayapó are one of the strongest and best-known Indigenous groups in the Brazilian Amazon — they have led the fight for Indigenous rights for 40 years — Bolsonaro’s anti-Indigenous policies are posing a significant threat
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“We’re fighting a war,” says Doto Takakire
“A war against politicians who want to destroy us and our land.”
far south of the Amazon River and in the states of Mato Grosso and Pará
Kayapó land is the largest tract of Indigenous territory in Brazil and the largest swath of relatively pristine forest in the Amazon’s southeast
a region known as the ”arc of deforestation.” Despite continuing incursions — the Kayapó lost 3 million acres of land on their eastern border to logging
and other development in the 1980s and 1990s — the group’s territory retains remarkable biodiversity
the Kayapó live in villages on the Xingu River and its tributaries
The men fish and hunt animals such as tapir
and make trips into the forest to collect Brazil nuts
and aerial surveillance data so the Kayapó can patrol their 1,250 miles of border
then there would definitely be no more forest at all,” says Renata Pinheiro
senior manager for Indigenous people and social policies at Conservation International Brasil
The Kayapó’s fight has been part of a larger movement to demand Indigenous land rights in Brazil following centuries of oppression. The implementation of Brazil’s Constitution in 1988, including article 231
which outlines those rights as well as the federal government’s responsibility to demarcate and protect the land
mean that those theoretical protections would always work in practice
all Indigenous land — Brazil has 305 Indigenous groups — would continue to come under threat
whether or not the groups had already completed the slow process of demarcation and official government recognition
have continued to impinge upon Indigenous territories
The construction of the BR-163 highway was part of the National Integration Plan implemented by Brazil’s military dictatorship — a project designed to bring Indigenous groups under government control
Anything and anyone in the way would be removed
By the time the highway opened in 1976, many Kayapó had succumbed to outbreaks of disease brought to the region by outsiders, and just 20 percent of the Kayapó living on what would become the Baú reserve survived
They no longer had access to the Jamanxim River and lost 1,158 square miles of land to wildcat miners
which they agreed to give up in exchange for what would be an empty promise to put an end to invasions of their territory
jumping from 4,450 square miles in 2000 to more than 12,580 square miles in 2018
Land grabbers: The growing assault on Brazil’s Indigenous areas. Read more
And deforestation on Indigenous land itself — illegal in Brazil under federal law — hasn’t stopped. A recent study from the research institute
showed that almost 67,000 acres of forest in the state of Pará were lost to unauthorized logging between August 2019 and July 2020
The region’s ever-expanding network of highways
has also “given loggers access to areas that were previously unreachable.”
It is also where some of them put pressure on the Kayapó
Takakire says he was approached several times by loggers in town
Because of his ability to speak to Indigenous people living in Baú and Menkragnoti
the loggers thought he could convince the Kayapó to give them permission to work on their land
they offered Takakire $10,000 Brazilian reais ($2,000) for his trouble
they upped it to $20,000 Brazilian reais ($4,000)
“I defend my people’s interests,” Takakire says
the railway would run 580 miles between Sinop
an important port city for the flow of agricultural commodities in the Amazon
The railroad’s main objective: to transport soy
Soy production in Brazil is soaring, reaching an estimated 134 million tons last year and making the country the world’s third-largest soy producer. A study published last year noted that soy was responsible for 10 percent of deforestation across South America in the last 20 years
and that “the most rapid expansion occurred in the Brazilian Amazon
where soybean area increased more than tenfold.”
The Kayapó living on the Baú and Menkragnoti reserves don’t need to see these numbers to know that soy is taking over the region
The constant flow of trucks carrying soybeans on highway BR-163 makes it obvious
knows that the proposed railroad will bring more soy farmers close to Kayapó land
60 percent at levels above what is considered safe
Contamination among riverside villagers jumped to 90 percent
“We’ve had some babies born with developmental problems,” says Bepdjo Mekragnotire
Mining is illegal on Kayapó territory, but legal on adjacent land, with the requirement that the Kayapó are consulted regarding possible environmental and health effects. Nevertheless, mining is rampant where the Kayapó live, occasionally with the involvement of some Kayapó. Rich in gold, the entire region has attracted everything from the smallest wildcat operations to some of the biggest mining giants, including Serabi Gold
a company headquartered in the UK that owns and operates two gold mining complexes in the region
Ever since Jair Bolsonaro campaigned for president in 2018, vowing to open up Indigenous land to mining and end federal recognition of Indigenous territories, the Kayapó have been feeling the pressure. Since then, the president has repeated his promises several times, saying two months after his election
“I will not demarcate one more square centimeter of Indigenous land.”
An Amazon defender stands up for her land and her people. Read more
I feared that the white men who came to our village were there to kill us and to take what was valuable from our land,” says Bekwyitexo Kayapó
chief of the Pukany village on the Menkragnoti reserve
I know that they’ve come to kill us in a different way
Jill Langlois is an independent journalist based in São Paulo, Brazil. She has been reporting from South America since 2010, writing for publications including National Geographic, The New York Times, Smithsonian Magazine, Al Jazeera, the Los Angeles Times, and the Associated Press. More about Jill Langlois →
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Brazil — The landscape near the indigenous Munduruku villages of Santarém
What was once an immense plain in the heart of the Amazon
the humid home to dense forests full of delicacies like açaí and pupunha palms
In 2017, the municipality’s harvest was the largest in a decade
consolidating the takeover of what is called the Santarém Plain
The expansion of agribusiness has had grave consequences for the indigenous people living there
They say their villages are constantly poisoned by pesticides, used on crops without any controls. “We can smell [the pesticides], it ruins our lunch,” Luciene Sousa, who lives in the village of Açaizal, told the Indigenous Missionary Council, a Catholic Church-affiliated organization, in November 2019
According to the Public Prosecutor’s Office
the spraying occurs less than 10 meters (33 feet) from the indigenous homes and farms
The agency says that “necessary safety measures have not been adopted [by the farmers] in the [pesticide] spraying areas.” It also reports the silting of streams in the area
a current complaint of the indigenous people
The history of the Munduruku people is marked by delays in demarcating their reservation
Around 600 Munduruku live in four villages south of Lake Maicá
which is fed by the Amazon and Tapajós rivers
they grow traditional fruits like graviola (soursop)
and grow manioc — their main input for artisanal flour production
there is pressure on the land due to the advance of soybean farming
They raise very few cashew or graviola trees anymore
The pesticides contaminate everything,” Gilson Rego
There are concerns about the unchecked use of pesticides. A study carried out in 2015 by researchers at the University of Brasilia showed high risk of exposure of the inhabitants to pesticides, especially those with glyphosate in their composition
queasiness and nausea are common within the community
And there are more serious cases — including respiratory and gastrointestinal illnesses — from exposure to the pesticides
including chickens that sometimes die from poisoning after eating soybeans from the neighboring farms
The onslaught of agribusiness is also a threat to the streams in the villages
“They [indigenous people] are digging artesian wells to survive
but it’s complicated because the water seems to be nearly all contaminated,” said Rego
who has been visiting the region for nearly 20 years
The Public Prosecutor’s Office has noted the damage due to soybean farming near the villages
“Our investigation has observed that the farms with infrastructure associated with the open branches [dirt roads that cut through the area] have caused the stream in Açaizal to be full of silt,” told the prosecutor’s office to Mongabay
It acknowledges that there are “no practices in place to control erosion from the grain fields located along the stream
or along the community’s access road.” Prosecutors have filed a lawsuit against the Pará state government and the municipality of Santarém because of the harm done to the indigenous people
The State Attorney General’s Office refutes this
it confirmed that there was “surveillance in areas deforested because of soybean farming,” but that “the state has emitted no authorization for execution of illegal actions within or near to this reserve.” The Santarém City Hall did not respond to requests for comment
The arrival of agribusiness on the Santarém Plain is relatively recent
Farmers were attracted by the flat expanse and easy access for shipping via nearby highways and rivers
The turning point was in 2003, when commodities giant Cargill opened a grain port in Santarém. “There was a political push to make [Santarém] into a soybean hub
what happened was a huge increase in land grabbing
which overran the people of the forest,” Rego said
An operation carried out by the Federal Police in 2004 found that public land in the region had been illegally sold
The scheme involved more than 500,000 hectares (1.2 million acres
about half the size of Jamaica) sold without title
including land belonging to indigenous groups and Afro-Brazilian quilombola communities
as well as also land destined for agrarian reform
The case is still dragging on and hundreds of fraudulent requests for legal documentation remain
“The region is mostly public and federal land and has been locked up
All requests for land legalization have been suspended,” the prosecutor’s office said
Some of the supposed landowners have come forward to have a say in the demarcation of reservation land
the Pará state wholesale food supply center
None of them responded to inquiries from Mongabay
“SIRSAN has the right to stand up for its members
but that doesn’t give it the right to get in the way of the field work [of defining boundaries of the reservation]
nor to refer to indigenous people in a racist manner
which is a crime,” the Federal Prosecutor’s Office said
together with regularization of land documentation for the area
is the most important measure in confronting the conflicts.”
the federal agency in charge of indigenous affairs
confirmed that it carries out studies to identify the boundaries of the reservation
The Munduruku have been fighting an uphill battle to regain possession of their land in Santarém for the past 12 years
Funai promised to deliver the studies for demarcation of the Santarém Plain Indigenous Territory by Dec
the organization failed to comply with three judicial orders to resume field work
also switched out the members of the group tasked with mapping the boundaries of the proposed reserve
The Pará Federal Justice Department called the measure “an offense to the principle of legality” and said the Funai leadership had “presented no motive” for the change
It’s not just the Munduruku who have been subject to Xavier’s whims
four other working groups in Funai saw their members transferred out
The measures have made it impossible to meet deadlines for demarcation of the Aracá-Padauiri reserve in Amazonas state
the Serrote dos Campos reserve in Pernambuco
and the Tuxá de Surubabel reserve in Bahia
telling Mongabay that “it was an administrative management move whose validity is defined in the Constitution and by law.” Critics say the changes are part of the tactics used by the current administration to slow down the demarcation process for new reserves
at the time the minister of justice and public security
blocked the demarcation processes for 17 other reserves by effectively questioning their merit
Moro deferred to a controversial “time frame” provision conceived by the previous administration of Michel Temer
which states that only areas occupied by indigenous people since before 1988 can be recognized
The provision has been harshly criticized as a setback for indigenous peoples
Funai falls under the authority of the justice ministry
who shot into the national spotlight as the judge overseeing the sweeping Operation Car Wash corruption probe from 2014
resigned from Bolsonaro’s cabinet in April
citing undue interference by the president in the justice ministry
Banner image of Graciene Munduruku on her traditional farm by Tiago Miotto/CIMI
This story was first reported by Mongabay’s Brazil team and published here on our Brazil site on April 8, 2020.
The “fortress conservation” model is under pressure in East Africa, as protected areas become battlegrounds over history, human rights, and global efforts to halt biodiversity loss. Mongabay’s Special Issue goes beyond the region’s world-renowned safaris to examine how rural communities and governments are reckoning with conservation’s colonial origins, and trying to forge a path forward […]
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The Amazon: Farmers and Ranchers. We help Amazon farmers and ranchers comply with Brazil's Forest Code.
Conversion to agriculture and cattle ranching is the greatest threat to the Amazon rainforest. At the current rate, scientists predict that more than half of the Amazon could be cleared or severely degraded within decades.
The Conservancy believes that the key to reverse this trend and reconcile the demand for production with conservation is an extraordinarily prescient Brazilian law - the Forest Code, which says that, in the Amazon, farmers and ranchers should retain 80% of their lands under native vegetation.
Our work is founded on creating realistic incentives for compliance with the law. We work in several municipalities in the Brazilian Amazon, some of them with the highest deforestation rates in the region:
The Conservancy is rapidly becoming known as the organization in Brazil that can enable all levels of Brazilian government to enforce the country’s Forest Code.
We will continue to collaborate with the local government to improve its environmental monitoring system for implementation of Brazil’s Forest Code.
Logout Gateway to the global feed industry
Worldwide the demand for sustainable soy is still low
There are a number of specialised flows that have sustainability as an important factor
but in general there is little enthusiasm for sustainable soy
director of the Agricultural Supply Chain division at Cargill
on Wednesday in a webinar of the American Soy Export Organization (USSEC)
“Customers do ask for solutions that are more sustainable
but usually there is no real added value for the companies to whom we sell ingredients.”
Suppliers must be able to serve both markets.”
Stone sees that the demand for soy from China
Little attention is currently paid to sustainability
a clear distinction can be made between different markets
“In China there is no value on sustainability yet
We cannot underestimate the importance of the Chinese market and we have also responded to it
“Europe has the most specific requirements
The demand for soy from China has recently increased again
The pig population grew much faster than expected after the outbreak of African swine fever
due to the rapidly growing pig population in China
“even though China has a strong focus on self-sufficiency”
“We have a large crushing branch (soya processing)
a food branch and a large animal feed branch in China
The recovery we see there has exceeded our expectations.” Stone is therefore optimistic about the worldwide demand for soy
also because he expects that (part of) the food service can open again this year
we have a lot of reasons to be positive about the demand for soy.”
Stone does not yet see a great demand from the meat substitute sector
A sector that also uses protein crops such as soy and that is growing rapidly
He emphasised that in general little attention is paid to food security and the feeding of the world’s population and the role proteins play in this
“We see about 2% annual growth in what we call the demand for traditional proteins
We certainly think that plant-based products will have a place on the consumer’s table
We see that vegetable proteins continue to grow
but it is part of a total solution to feed a growing and hungry world.”