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Reuters
Reuters
Environment
Terje Solsvik

Better satellite images to help save rainforests, Norway says

FILE PHOTO: A man cuts down a tree with a chainsaw in a forest near the municipality of Itaituba, Brazil August 7, 2017. REUTERS/Nacho Doce/File Photo

OSLO (Reuters) - Norway is to commission high-resolution satellite images of the Amazon and other rainforests as part of its multi-billion dollar effort to detect tropical deforestation, tree by tree if necessary, and slow climate change, it said on Tuesday.

Under a mix of U.N. and bilateral schemes, Norway has set aside up to 3 billion crowns ($343 million) a year for a decade to help save rainforests and improve the livelihoods of those who live there.

Norway's Minister of Climate and Environment Ola Elvestuen poses for a picture in Oslo, Norway June 24, 2019. Picture taken June 24, 2019. REUTERS/Terje Solsvik

It will spend 450 million Norwegian crowns ($53 million) to pay for satellite images for the next four years to help with the tricky task of monitoring progress as the largest contributor to the programs.

"The catastrophic loss we're seeing now simply can't continue," Climate and Environment Minister Ola Elvestuen told Reuters.

"The purpose is to give us all a better insight into what's happening in the forests and improve our ability to save them."

FILE PHOTO: Clouds are seen over the Amazon rainforest near Novo Progresso, southeast of Para state, Brazil, November 5, 2018. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes/File Photo

The programs supports a range of national and local schemes designed to reward those preserving tropical forests, which soak up heat-trapping carbon dioxide to help limit the rise in temperatures that would lead to more extreme weather events and rising sea levels.

Countries that commit to close cooperation on deforestation will get access to data on a daily basis, making it possible to uncover deforestation even of very small areas, down to the removal of a single tree, Elvestuen added.

Images will also be made available for free to governments, scientists, the media and non-governmental organizations at regular intervals.

Rich from oil and gas, Norway has since 2008 injected $1.2 billion in Brazil's Amazon Fund to help protect forests under threat from logging and conversion to farmland, and has made its first payment to Indonesia.

But the program is not without controversy.

While Brazil's rate of deforestation fell by more than 75% between 2008 and 2015, it has since risen, leading Norway to reduce payouts.

Early-warning satellite data recently showed Brazil's deforestation sped up in May to the fastest rate in a decade, as experts pointed to illegal loggers encouraged by the easing of environmental protections under President Jair Bolsonaro.

Bolsonaro's environment minister told Reuters this month Brazil remains committed to protecting forests however, and that the country plans its own tender for high-resolution satellite images.

(Editing by Alison Williams)

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