Guyana signs historic Amazonian pact to protect tropical forest

Guyana joined six fellow Amazonian countries on Friday in Letecia, Colombia to sign a pact to protect the world’s largest tropical forest.
The pact, signed at a time when the Amazon is under threat from fires, aims to coordinate disaster response and satellite monitoring.

Colombian President Ivan Duque, Bolivian President Evo Morales, Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno and Peruvian President Martin Vizcarra, Surinamese Vice President Michael Ashwin Adhin and Brazilian Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo along with Guyana’s Natural Resources Minister, Raphael Trotman signed onto the pact

Natural Resources Minister Raphael Trotman, who represented President David Granger, signed on behalf of Guyana. Colombia’s President, Ivan Duque; Bolivia’s President, Evo Morales; Ecuador’s President, Lenin Moreno and Peru’s President Martin Vizcarra were the Heads of State who signed. Suriname’s Vice President, Michael Ashwin Adhin and Brazil’s Foreign Minister, Ernesto Araujo signed the pact on behalf of their respective countries.
Minister Trotman, in delivering a message on behalf of President Granger, reiterated to the South American leaders that, “our President is the visionary who conceptualised the Green State Development Strategy (GSDS) for Guyana – it is our lighted path towards attaining a green and sustainable economy and is open to be shared and improved upon.
“An inferno in the Amazon, two-thirds of which is in Brazil, and the reason for us being here, threatens the rainforest eco-system and also affects the entire globe,” Minister Trotman related.
“The effects of damage to the Amazon go far beyond Brazil and its neighbours. We are the lungs of the earth; we must all breathe to live. Therefore, our presence here is in recognition of the value and importance of the Amazon, and the Guiana Shield, and our role as custodians, stewards, and guardians of it,” Minister Trotman asserted.
The Amazon is the world’s largest rainforest, which produces approximately 20 per cent of Earth’s oxygen and spans eight countries, including Guyana. It covers 40 per cent of South America, is inhabited by 30 million people and is home to vast numbers of mammals, birds, amphibians and reptiles, most of them unique to the region. New plant or animal species are discovered at a rate of one every two days in the Amazon.
Guyana’s Ambassador to Brazil, George Talbot joined Minister Trotman, who was accompanied by Head of the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility Project (FCPF), Clayton Hall. Minister Trotman and Hall travelled with the Surinamese delegation and returned to Guyana Friday evening.