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![]() by AFP Staff Writers Moscow (AFP) Aug 24, 2021
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday pledged hundreds of millions of dollars to protect the country's forests, saying the nation must learn from the "unprecedented" wildfires that engulfed swathes of Siberia. Experts blame the huge fires that have ripped across Russia's vast territory in recent years on climate change, negligence and underfunded forestry management services. "We need to learn lessons and radically strengthen the forest protection system," Putin told a televised meeting of officials of the ruling United Russia party. Putin, a former prominent climate-change sceptic, was speaking ahead of parliamentary elections next month that could see the unpopular United Russia party struggle. He also pledged a significant surge in funding for the efforts. "To improve the regions' capabilities in protecting forests, we will additionally allocate another 24 billion rubles ($325 million, 277 million euro)," he said, in brief remarks on the fires in which he didn't mention climate change. Russia's forestry agency says fires this year have ravaged over 173,000 square kilometres (67,000 square miles), making it the second-worst season since the turn of the century. In Russia's largest and coldest region of Yakutia, which sits atop permafrost, fires have burned through an area larger than Portugal. Officials in areas hard-hit have called for resources and economic support from Moscow to deal with the damage. Putin described the scale of the fires this month as "absolutely unprecedented". The Russian leader this year participated in a summit hosted by US President Joe Biden and said Moscow is interested in "stepping up international cooperation" on climate change.
![]() ![]() Wildfires devastate Bolivian nature reserves Chiquitos, Bolivia (AFP) Aug 24, 2021 Wildfires, mostly started intentionally, have scorched almost 600,000 hectares of land in eastern Bolivia already this year, authorities said. On Monday night there were 20 active fires in Santa Cruz state affecting seven protected areas. The government said 200,000 hectares (495,000 acres) had burned in just two days. Most of the fires are in the forests of Chiquitania, a region that lies between the Amazon to the north, the plains of Cahco to the south and the Pantanal - the world's large ... read more
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