G7 leaders should step up own climate plans to help the Amazon, Greenpeace says
OTTAWA — Some Canadian environment groups are urging Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to put the brakes on attempts to seal a free trade agreement with Brazil until stronger policies to protect the Amazon rainforest are in place.
Trudeau landed Friday in the French resort town of Biarritz for his final international summit before the fall federal election. The talks between the world’s wealthiest developed economies are expected to include tensions with China, political unrest in Hong Kong and the nuclear deal with Iran, which is backed by Europe but opposed by U.S. President Donald Trump.
All of that, however, was upstaged by the fires burning in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest, which are now the subject of an expected emergency session.
France and Ireland have already threatened to block the European Union’s trade deal with the Mercosur trading bloc, saying Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s rapid deforestation of the Amazon has to stop. A record number of fires are burning there, threatening a habitat that supplies one-fifth of the Earth’s oxygen and is home to one-fifth of its fresh water and half of all insect, plant and animal species.