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121Q943105 | Inglês, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

Texto associado.

T E X T

Britain, Norway and the United States join forces with businesses to protect tropical forests.


Britain, Norway and the United States said Thursday they would join forces with some of the world’s biggest companies in an effort to rally more than $1 billion for countries that can show they are lowering emissions by protecting tropical forests. The goal is to make intact forests more economically valuable than they would be if the land were cleared for timber and agriculture.


The initiative comes as the world loses acre after acre of forests to feed global demand for soy, palm oil, timber and cattle. Those forests, from Brazil to Indonesia, are essential to limiting the linked crises of climate change and a global biodiversity collapse. They are also home to Indigenous and other forest communities. Amazon, Nestlé, Unilever, GlaxoSmithKline and Salesforce are among the companies promising money for the new initiative, known as the LEAF Coalition.


Last year, despite the global downturn triggered by the pandemic, tropical deforestation was up 12 percent from 2019, collectively wiping out an area about the size of Switzerland. That destruction released about twice as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as cars in the United States emit annually.


“The LEAF Coalition is a groundbreaking example of the scale and type of collaboration that is needed to fight the climate crisis and achieve net-zero emissions globally by 2050,” John Kerry, President Biden’s senior climate envoy, said in a statement. “Bringing together government and privatesector resources is a necessary step in supporting the large-scale efforts that must be mobilized to halt deforestation and begin to restore tropical and subtropical forests.”

An existing global effort called REDD+ has struggled to attract sufficient investment and gotten mired in bureaucratic slowdowns. This initiative builds on it, bringing private capital to the table at the country or state level. Until now, companies have invested in forests more informally, sometimes supporting questionable projects that prompted accusations of corruption and “greenwashing,” when a company or brand portrays itself as an environmental steward but its true actions don’t support the claim.


The new initiative will use satellite imagery to verify results across wide areas to guard against those problems. Monitoring entire jurisdictions would, in theory, prevent governments from saving forestland in one place only to let it be cut down elsewhere.


Under the plan, countries, states or provinces with tropical forests would commit to reducing deforestation and degradation. Each year or two, they would submit their results, calculating the number of tons of carbon dioxide reduced by their efforts. An independent monitor would verify their claims using satellite images and other measures. Companies and governments would contribute to a pool of money that would pay the national or regional government at least $10 per ton of reduced carbon dioxide.


Companies will not be allowed to participate unless they have a scientifically sound plan to reach net zero emissions, according to Nigel Purvis, the chief executive of Climate Advisers, a group affiliated with the initiative. “Their number one obligation to the world from a climate standpoint is to reduce their own emissions across their supply chains, across their products, everything,” Mr. Purvis said. He also emphasized that the coalition’s plans would respect the rights of Indigenous and forest communities.


From: www.nytimes.com/April 22, 2021

According to the text, tropical forests are being cut down, among other reasons, for
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122Q943109 | Inglês, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

Texto associado.

T E X T

Britain, Norway and the United States join forces with businesses to protect tropical forests.


Britain, Norway and the United States said Thursday they would join forces with some of the world’s biggest companies in an effort to rally more than $1 billion for countries that can show they are lowering emissions by protecting tropical forests. The goal is to make intact forests more economically valuable than they would be if the land were cleared for timber and agriculture.


The initiative comes as the world loses acre after acre of forests to feed global demand for soy, palm oil, timber and cattle. Those forests, from Brazil to Indonesia, are essential to limiting the linked crises of climate change and a global biodiversity collapse. They are also home to Indigenous and other forest communities. Amazon, Nestlé, Unilever, GlaxoSmithKline and Salesforce are among the companies promising money for the new initiative, known as the LEAF Coalition.


Last year, despite the global downturn triggered by the pandemic, tropical deforestation was up 12 percent from 2019, collectively wiping out an area about the size of Switzerland. That destruction released about twice as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as cars in the United States emit annually.


“The LEAF Coalition is a groundbreaking example of the scale and type of collaboration that is needed to fight the climate crisis and achieve net-zero emissions globally by 2050,” John Kerry, President Biden’s senior climate envoy, said in a statement. “Bringing together government and privatesector resources is a necessary step in supporting the large-scale efforts that must be mobilized to halt deforestation and begin to restore tropical and subtropical forests.”

An existing global effort called REDD+ has struggled to attract sufficient investment and gotten mired in bureaucratic slowdowns. This initiative builds on it, bringing private capital to the table at the country or state level. Until now, companies have invested in forests more informally, sometimes supporting questionable projects that prompted accusations of corruption and “greenwashing,” when a company or brand portrays itself as an environmental steward but its true actions don’t support the claim.


The new initiative will use satellite imagery to verify results across wide areas to guard against those problems. Monitoring entire jurisdictions would, in theory, prevent governments from saving forestland in one place only to let it be cut down elsewhere.


Under the plan, countries, states or provinces with tropical forests would commit to reducing deforestation and degradation. Each year or two, they would submit their results, calculating the number of tons of carbon dioxide reduced by their efforts. An independent monitor would verify their claims using satellite images and other measures. Companies and governments would contribute to a pool of money that would pay the national or regional government at least $10 per ton of reduced carbon dioxide.


Companies will not be allowed to participate unless they have a scientifically sound plan to reach net zero emissions, according to Nigel Purvis, the chief executive of Climate Advisers, a group affiliated with the initiative. “Their number one obligation to the world from a climate standpoint is to reduce their own emissions across their supply chains, across their products, everything,” Mr. Purvis said. He also emphasized that the coalition’s plans would respect the rights of Indigenous and forest communities.


From: www.nytimes.com/April 22, 2021

The text mentions situations in which sometimes companies have tried to fund projects in defense of tropical forests, but were prey to circumstances related to
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123Q680783 | Geografia, Clima, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UEA, VUNESP, 2018

O ano de 2016 começou mal em Minas Gerais. Logo nos primeiros dias de janeiro um aguaceiro provocou enchentes, matou 79 pessoas e deixou centenas de desabrigados. No mês, foram 83 mortes. Fatalidade? Mais ou menos. Evitar chuvas, todo mundo sabe, é impossível. Mas algumas podem ser previstas. E essa foi. Os cálculos do Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais indicaram 50 milímetros diários de chuva entre 1 e 5 de janeiro. Precipitações acima de 40 milímetros a cada 24 horas já são consideradas perigosas.
(https://super.abril.com.br. Adaptado.)
O excerto apresenta um exemplo de previsão do
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124Q939695 | Português, Interpretação de Textos, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UEA, VUNESP, 2019

Texto associado.
Leia o trecho de A hora da estrela, de Clarice Lispector, para responder à questão

De dia usava saia e blusa, de noite dormia de combinação. Uma colega de quarto não sabia como avisar-lhe que seu cheiro era murrinhento. E como não sabia, ficou por isso mesmo, pois tinha medo de ofendê-la. Nada nela era iridescente1 , embora a pele do rosto entre as manchas tivesse um leve brilho de opala. Mas não importava. Ninguém olhava para ela na rua, ela era café frio.
E assim se passava o tempo para a moça esta. Assoava o nariz na barra da combinação. Não tinha aquela coisa delicada que se chama encanto. Só eu a vejo encantadora. Só eu, seu autor, a amo. Sofro por ela. E só eu é que posso dizer assim: “que é que você me pede chorando que eu não lhe dê cantando”? Essa moça não sabia que ela era o que era, assim como um cachorro não sabe que é cachorro. Daí não se sentir infeliz. A única coisa que queria era viver. Não sabia para quê, não se indagava. Quem sabe, achava que havia uma gloriazinha em viver. Ela pensava que a pessoa é obrigada a ser feliz. Então era. Antes de nascer ela era uma ideia? Antes de nascer ela era morta? E depois de nascer ela ia morrer? Mas que fina talhada de melancia.

(A hora da estrela, 1998.)

1 iridescente: colorido como o arco-íris.
No fim do primeiro parágrafo, a expressão “café frio” é equivalente a
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125Q680770 | Português, Significação Contextual de Palavras, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UEA, VUNESP, 2018

Texto associado.
Leia o texto de Jorge Coli para responder à questão.

Dizer o que seja a arte é coisa difícil. Um sem-número de tratados de estética debruçou-se sobre o problema, procurando situá-lo, procurando definir o conceito. Mas, se buscamos uma resposta clara e definitiva, decepcionamo-nos: elas são divergentes, contraditórias, além de frequentemente se pretenderem exclusivas, propondo-se como solução única. Desse ponto de vista, a empresa é desencorajadora.
Entretanto, se pedirmos a qualquer pessoa que possua um mínimo contato com a cultura para nos citar alguns exemplos de obras de arte ou de artistas, ficaremos certamente satisfeitos. Todos sabemos que a Mona Lisa, que a Nona Sinfonia de Beethoven, que a Divina Comédia, que Guernica de Picasso ou o Davi de Michelangelo são, indiscutivelmente, obras de arte. Assim, mesmo sem possuirmos uma definição clara e lógica do conceito, somos capazes de identificar algumas produções da cultura em que vivemos como “arte”.
É possível dizer, então, que arte são certas manifestações da atividade humana diante das quais nosso sentimento é admirativo, isto é: nossa cultura possui uma noção que denomina solidamente algumas de suas atividades e as privilegia. Portanto, podemos ficar tranquilos: se não conseguimos saber o que a arte é, pelo menos sabemos quais coisas correspondem a essa ideia e como devemos nos comportar diante delas.

(O que é arte, 2010. Adaptado.)
“arte são certas manifestações da atividade humana diante das quais nosso sentimento é admirativo” (3° parágrafo)
Os dois segmentos sublinhados podem ser substituídos, com correção gramatical, por:
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126Q680780 | Conhecimentos Gerais, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UEA, VUNESP, 2018

Quem pratica a retórica fará que apareça a mesma coisa às mesmas pessoas, ora justa, quando quiser, ora injusta. O Palamedes de Eleia discorria com tanta arte que aos seus ouvintes as mesmas coisas pareciam semelhantes e dessemelhantes, unas e múltiplas, permanentes e transitórias.
(Platão. Fedro, 2016. Adaptado.)
Platão refere-se
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127Q943085 | Biologia, Vírus e bactérias, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

Em relação às doenças bacterianas, é correto afirmar que
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128Q943110 | Inglês, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

Texto associado.

T E X T

Britain, Norway and the United States join forces with businesses to protect tropical forests.


Britain, Norway and the United States said Thursday they would join forces with some of the world’s biggest companies in an effort to rally more than $1 billion for countries that can show they are lowering emissions by protecting tropical forests. The goal is to make intact forests more economically valuable than they would be if the land were cleared for timber and agriculture.


The initiative comes as the world loses acre after acre of forests to feed global demand for soy, palm oil, timber and cattle. Those forests, from Brazil to Indonesia, are essential to limiting the linked crises of climate change and a global biodiversity collapse. They are also home to Indigenous and other forest communities. Amazon, Nestlé, Unilever, GlaxoSmithKline and Salesforce are among the companies promising money for the new initiative, known as the LEAF Coalition.


Last year, despite the global downturn triggered by the pandemic, tropical deforestation was up 12 percent from 2019, collectively wiping out an area about the size of Switzerland. That destruction released about twice as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as cars in the United States emit annually.


“The LEAF Coalition is a groundbreaking example of the scale and type of collaboration that is needed to fight the climate crisis and achieve net-zero emissions globally by 2050,” John Kerry, President Biden’s senior climate envoy, said in a statement. “Bringing together government and privatesector resources is a necessary step in supporting the large-scale efforts that must be mobilized to halt deforestation and begin to restore tropical and subtropical forests.”

An existing global effort called REDD+ has struggled to attract sufficient investment and gotten mired in bureaucratic slowdowns. This initiative builds on it, bringing private capital to the table at the country or state level. Until now, companies have invested in forests more informally, sometimes supporting questionable projects that prompted accusations of corruption and “greenwashing,” when a company or brand portrays itself as an environmental steward but its true actions don’t support the claim.


The new initiative will use satellite imagery to verify results across wide areas to guard against those problems. Monitoring entire jurisdictions would, in theory, prevent governments from saving forestland in one place only to let it be cut down elsewhere.


Under the plan, countries, states or provinces with tropical forests would commit to reducing deforestation and degradation. Each year or two, they would submit their results, calculating the number of tons of carbon dioxide reduced by their efforts. An independent monitor would verify their claims using satellite images and other measures. Companies and governments would contribute to a pool of money that would pay the national or regional government at least $10 per ton of reduced carbon dioxide.


Companies will not be allowed to participate unless they have a scientifically sound plan to reach net zero emissions, according to Nigel Purvis, the chief executive of Climate Advisers, a group affiliated with the initiative. “Their number one obligation to the world from a climate standpoint is to reduce their own emissions across their supply chains, across their products, everything,” Mr. Purvis said. He also emphasized that the coalition’s plans would respect the rights of Indigenous and forest communities.


From: www.nytimes.com/April 22, 2021

Countries that will benefit from the investments of the LEAF coalition, will have to
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129Q680771 | História, Antiguidade Ocidental Gregos, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UEA, VUNESP, 2018

O cidadão não é cidadão pelo fato de se ter estabelecido em algum lugar – pois os estrangeiros e os escravos também são estabelecidos. [...] Por aí se vê, pois, o que é o cidadão: aquele que tem uma parte legal na autoridade deliberativa e na autoridade judiciária.
(Aristóteles. A política, s/d.)
Aristóteles, filósofo do século IV a.C., fundou e dirigiu, na cidade de Atenas, o Liceu, um centro de estudos filosóficos. A sua definição de cidadania
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130Q939718 | Geografia, Agricultura brasileira, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UEA, VUNESP, 2019

Principal grão do Brasil, foi introduzido no país em 1914. A partir da década de 1970, o setor registrou alto crescimento graças à migração de produtores do Sul, com o desenvolvimento de novas técnicas de cultivo e do uso de pesticidas. “Os preços aumentavam e os produtores do Sul não tinham terra suficiente para desenvolver. Muitos se instalaram no Cerrado, onde transformaram terras baratas, que eram inóspitas para o plantio da oleaginosa”, disse Amélio Dall’Agnol, da Embrapa.
(www.afp.com, 15.06.2019. Adaptado.)
O grão e a região brasileira que abrigou a sua primeira frente de expansão são
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131Q943075 | Física, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

O isolamento social ocasionado pela pandemia da Covid-19 fez com que houvesse uma ampliação significativa das atividades profissionais para o formato remoto. Essa situação ocasionou uma demanda por internet de melhor qualidade. Neste contexto, muitos clientes realizaram a migração para a internet transmitida por fibra ótica. A fibra ótica geralmente é composta de sílica (SiO2) ou plástico, com diâmetro da ordem de micrômetro, cuja função é a transmissão de um sinal, como a luz, por exemplo. A fibra apresenta muitas vantagens, dentre as quais se encontram estabilidade no sinal transmitido, pouca interferência eletromagnética, alta velocidade de transmissão de dados, grande disponibilidade de matéria prima e alta durabilidade. A propagação de um pulso eletromagnético dentro de uma fibra ótica é explicada a partir da
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132Q939726 | Matemática, Porcentagem, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UEA, VUNESP, 2019

Em negociação com o lojista, Clarice obteve um desconto de 10% sobre o preço original P de certo produto, obtendo o preço P1Em negociação com o lojista, Clarice obteve um desconto de 10% sobre o preço original P de certo produto, obtendo o preço P1 . Ela continuou a negociação e obteve mais 10% de desconto sobre P1 , obtendo o preço final P2 . Se P2 é igual a R$ 1.215,00, então o preço original P era igual a
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133Q943071 | Geografia, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

Assinale a opção que expressa corretamente a interpretação geográfica da pandemia do Novo Corona Vírus.
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134Q939699 | Português, Interpretação de Textos, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UEA, VUNESP, 2019

Texto associado.
Leia o texto de João Vicente Ganzarolli de Oliveira para responder à questão

No sentido amplo, a arte é uma atividade produtora, responsável pela criação de seres que, sem a intervenção humana, não existiriam. Entendendo dessa forma, são frutos da arte tanto um moteto1 de Palestrina quanto um automóvel; uma ferramenta pré-histórica e um computador. Como a arte, também a natureza é geradora. Nelas temos duas fontes de existência das criaturas; ambas insurgem- -se contra o nada. Como diz Étienne Gilson, “A missão do artista é enriquecer o mundo com novos seres. O artista sente um impulso irresistível de violentar o nada”.

(A humanização da arte, 2006. Adaptado.)

1moteto: tipo de composição musical medieval.
Segundo o conceito amplo de arte exposto no texto,
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135Q939731 | Matemática, Estatística, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UEA, VUNESP, 2019

As alturas dos atletas que iniciaram um período de testes no Vôlei Esporte Clube são 1,99 m; 2,02 m; 2,07 m; 1,91 m; 1,94 m e 1,95 m. A altura mediana e a altura média desses seis atletas são, respectivamente,
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136Q943084 | Biologia, Características dos seres vivos, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

Relacione, corretamente, os tipos de reprodução com suas respectivas características, numerando os parênteses abaixo de acordo com a seguinte indicação:
1.Reprodução sexuada; 2.Reprodução assexuada.
( ) Anterozoides, espermatozoides, oosfera e óvulos são exemplos de gametas. ( ) Forma organismo com constituição genética diferente dos progenitores. ( ) Não envolve a formação de gametas. ( ) Esporulação, cissiparidade e brotamento são exemplos de tipos dessa reprodução.
A sequência correta, de cima para baixo, é:
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137Q943060 | História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

A imprensa local veiculou, no último mês de novembro, que o pesquisador cearense Licínio Nunes de Miranda, em sua pesquisa de doutoramento, encontrou, no cemitério São João Batista, em Fortaleza, o túmulo esquecido do herói nacional Francisco José do Nascimento, desta forma trazendo à tona o importante papel deste personagem
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138Q943107 | Inglês, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

Texto associado.

T E X T

Britain, Norway and the United States join forces with businesses to protect tropical forests.


Britain, Norway and the United States said Thursday they would join forces with some of the world’s biggest companies in an effort to rally more than $1 billion for countries that can show they are lowering emissions by protecting tropical forests. The goal is to make intact forests more economically valuable than they would be if the land were cleared for timber and agriculture.


The initiative comes as the world loses acre after acre of forests to feed global demand for soy, palm oil, timber and cattle. Those forests, from Brazil to Indonesia, are essential to limiting the linked crises of climate change and a global biodiversity collapse. They are also home to Indigenous and other forest communities. Amazon, Nestlé, Unilever, GlaxoSmithKline and Salesforce are among the companies promising money for the new initiative, known as the LEAF Coalition.


Last year, despite the global downturn triggered by the pandemic, tropical deforestation was up 12 percent from 2019, collectively wiping out an area about the size of Switzerland. That destruction released about twice as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as cars in the United States emit annually.


“The LEAF Coalition is a groundbreaking example of the scale and type of collaboration that is needed to fight the climate crisis and achieve net-zero emissions globally by 2050,” John Kerry, President Biden’s senior climate envoy, said in a statement. “Bringing together government and privatesector resources is a necessary step in supporting the large-scale efforts that must be mobilized to halt deforestation and begin to restore tropical and subtropical forests.”

An existing global effort called REDD+ has struggled to attract sufficient investment and gotten mired in bureaucratic slowdowns. This initiative builds on it, bringing private capital to the table at the country or state level. Until now, companies have invested in forests more informally, sometimes supporting questionable projects that prompted accusations of corruption and “greenwashing,” when a company or brand portrays itself as an environmental steward but its true actions don’t support the claim.


The new initiative will use satellite imagery to verify results across wide areas to guard against those problems. Monitoring entire jurisdictions would, in theory, prevent governments from saving forestland in one place only to let it be cut down elsewhere.


Under the plan, countries, states or provinces with tropical forests would commit to reducing deforestation and degradation. Each year or two, they would submit their results, calculating the number of tons of carbon dioxide reduced by their efforts. An independent monitor would verify their claims using satellite images and other measures. Companies and governments would contribute to a pool of money that would pay the national or regional government at least $10 per ton of reduced carbon dioxide.


Companies will not be allowed to participate unless they have a scientifically sound plan to reach net zero emissions, according to Nigel Purvis, the chief executive of Climate Advisers, a group affiliated with the initiative. “Their number one obligation to the world from a climate standpoint is to reduce their own emissions across their supply chains, across their products, everything,” Mr. Purvis said. He also emphasized that the coalition’s plans would respect the rights of Indigenous and forest communities.


From: www.nytimes.com/April 22, 2021

According to John Kerry, the LEAF coalition constitutes an essential endeavor towards the
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139Q943108 | Inglês, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

Texto associado.

T E X T

Britain, Norway and the United States join forces with businesses to protect tropical forests.


Britain, Norway and the United States said Thursday they would join forces with some of the world’s biggest companies in an effort to rally more than $1 billion for countries that can show they are lowering emissions by protecting tropical forests. The goal is to make intact forests more economically valuable than they would be if the land were cleared for timber and agriculture.


The initiative comes as the world loses acre after acre of forests to feed global demand for soy, palm oil, timber and cattle. Those forests, from Brazil to Indonesia, are essential to limiting the linked crises of climate change and a global biodiversity collapse. They are also home to Indigenous and other forest communities. Amazon, Nestlé, Unilever, GlaxoSmithKline and Salesforce are among the companies promising money for the new initiative, known as the LEAF Coalition.


Last year, despite the global downturn triggered by the pandemic, tropical deforestation was up 12 percent from 2019, collectively wiping out an area about the size of Switzerland. That destruction released about twice as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as cars in the United States emit annually.


“The LEAF Coalition is a groundbreaking example of the scale and type of collaboration that is needed to fight the climate crisis and achieve net-zero emissions globally by 2050,” John Kerry, President Biden’s senior climate envoy, said in a statement. “Bringing together government and privatesector resources is a necessary step in supporting the large-scale efforts that must be mobilized to halt deforestation and begin to restore tropical and subtropical forests.”

An existing global effort called REDD+ has struggled to attract sufficient investment and gotten mired in bureaucratic slowdowns. This initiative builds on it, bringing private capital to the table at the country or state level. Until now, companies have invested in forests more informally, sometimes supporting questionable projects that prompted accusations of corruption and “greenwashing,” when a company or brand portrays itself as an environmental steward but its true actions don’t support the claim.


The new initiative will use satellite imagery to verify results across wide areas to guard against those problems. Monitoring entire jurisdictions would, in theory, prevent governments from saving forestland in one place only to let it be cut down elsewhere.


Under the plan, countries, states or provinces with tropical forests would commit to reducing deforestation and degradation. Each year or two, they would submit their results, calculating the number of tons of carbon dioxide reduced by their efforts. An independent monitor would verify their claims using satellite images and other measures. Companies and governments would contribute to a pool of money that would pay the national or regional government at least $10 per ton of reduced carbon dioxide.


Companies will not be allowed to participate unless they have a scientifically sound plan to reach net zero emissions, according to Nigel Purvis, the chief executive of Climate Advisers, a group affiliated with the initiative. “Their number one obligation to the world from a climate standpoint is to reduce their own emissions across their supply chains, across their products, everything,” Mr. Purvis said. He also emphasized that the coalition’s plans would respect the rights of Indigenous and forest communities.


From: www.nytimes.com/April 22, 2021

Statistics related to deforestation in tropical forests show that in 2020 it
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140Q943111 | Inglês, Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais, UECE, UECE CEV, 2021

Texto associado.

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Britain, Norway and the United States join forces with businesses to protect tropical forests.


Britain, Norway and the United States said Thursday they would join forces with some of the world’s biggest companies in an effort to rally more than $1 billion for countries that can show they are lowering emissions by protecting tropical forests. The goal is to make intact forests more economically valuable than they would be if the land were cleared for timber and agriculture.


The initiative comes as the world loses acre after acre of forests to feed global demand for soy, palm oil, timber and cattle. Those forests, from Brazil to Indonesia, are essential to limiting the linked crises of climate change and a global biodiversity collapse. They are also home to Indigenous and other forest communities. Amazon, Nestlé, Unilever, GlaxoSmithKline and Salesforce are among the companies promising money for the new initiative, known as the LEAF Coalition.


Last year, despite the global downturn triggered by the pandemic, tropical deforestation was up 12 percent from 2019, collectively wiping out an area about the size of Switzerland. That destruction released about twice as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as cars in the United States emit annually.


“The LEAF Coalition is a groundbreaking example of the scale and type of collaboration that is needed to fight the climate crisis and achieve net-zero emissions globally by 2050,” John Kerry, President Biden’s senior climate envoy, said in a statement. “Bringing together government and privatesector resources is a necessary step in supporting the large-scale efforts that must be mobilized to halt deforestation and begin to restore tropical and subtropical forests.”

An existing global effort called REDD+ has struggled to attract sufficient investment and gotten mired in bureaucratic slowdowns. This initiative builds on it, bringing private capital to the table at the country or state level. Until now, companies have invested in forests more informally, sometimes supporting questionable projects that prompted accusations of corruption and “greenwashing,” when a company or brand portrays itself as an environmental steward but its true actions don’t support the claim.


The new initiative will use satellite imagery to verify results across wide areas to guard against those problems. Monitoring entire jurisdictions would, in theory, prevent governments from saving forestland in one place only to let it be cut down elsewhere.


Under the plan, countries, states or provinces with tropical forests would commit to reducing deforestation and degradation. Each year or two, they would submit their results, calculating the number of tons of carbon dioxide reduced by their efforts. An independent monitor would verify their claims using satellite images and other measures. Companies and governments would contribute to a pool of money that would pay the national or regional government at least $10 per ton of reduced carbon dioxide.


Companies will not be allowed to participate unless they have a scientifically sound plan to reach net zero emissions, according to Nigel Purvis, the chief executive of Climate Advisers, a group affiliated with the initiative. “Their number one obligation to the world from a climate standpoint is to reduce their own emissions across their supply chains, across their products, everything,” Mr. Purvis said. He also emphasized that the coalition’s plans would respect the rights of Indigenous and forest communities.


From: www.nytimes.com/April 22, 2021

Still about the countries which will receive financial support from the coalition to reduce emissions and deforestation, the text mentions that they will
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