Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Friday, September 20 2019 - 03:18
AsiaNet
Game of Thrones star Nikolaj Coster-Waldau travels to the Amazon with UNDP to discover the real story behind the fires
NEW YORK, Sept. 20, 2019 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Game of Thrones star and UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Nikolaj Coster-Waldau has 
just returned from a fact-finding journey to Peru, where he traveled deep into 
the jungles of the Amazon with the UN agency to get to the bottom of the causes 
– and the impacts – of the fires. His mission also offered insights into the 
effects of climate change on the hard-to-reach communities living in the Amazon.

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"When I saw those images of the Amazon on fire, like everyone else, I felt 
shocked, powerless and angry. It didn't make sense to me," Coster-Waldau said. 
"Which is why I wanted to come to Peru and find out why the Amazon is on fire."

What Coster-Waldau discovered was that the deforestation in the Peruvian 
Amazon, to which the fires are attributed, can be traced back to economic and 
social inequalities facing the communities living in this region. 

Indigenous and local communities play a key role in safeguarding the Amazon 
rainforest, which covers more than 60 percent of Peru and is critical for our 
planet because it holds about 20 percent of the river water on Earth. 

But in the Peruvian Amazon, many of these communities also face high levels of 
poverty and inequality and lack basic infrastructure and resources. Most are 
small farming or fishing villages whose residents live off the forest and often 
rely on deforesting their plots to grow food and earn a living. 

"What I found when I traveled to Peru is that the burning of the Amazon, the 
deforestation is incredibly complex. But at the core is social inequality," 
Coster-Waldau said. 

"I met indigenous communities, and they explained the awful dilemma they face: 
They are farmers. They need to farm, not for great profit but simply to feed 
their families," Coster-Waldau said "These communities are often living in 
extreme poverty and have an impossible choice: they are the guardians of the 
Amazon, but they also have little choice but to clear sections of it in order 
to plant crops just to survive."

"The problems indigenous communities face in the Amazon are a window into not 
just the impacts of climate change, which have intensified over the past 20 
years, but one of its biggest causes: inequality," said Coster-Waldau.

"If we don't address inequality on a global scale, then we won't be able to fix 
climate change. It's complex, but there's hope. We have the resources, we have 
the technology. We just need to do it. We need to come together as individuals, 
as communities, as nations. And if we do that, we can solve the problem."

"Development challenges are complex, and in Peru, home to the second largest 
portion of Amazon forest, we have to pursue integrated solutions that ensure 
that vulnerable communities can accelerate progress towards equality and 
resilience to climate change," said Maria del Carmen Sacasa, Resident 
Representative of UNDP in Peru.

UNDP is supporting government, private sector and communities in their efforts 
to reduce deforestation and address climate change in the Peruvian Amazon. 
Aligned with Peru's national policy framework, UNDP and partners address the 
root causes of environmental degradation through supporting inclusive 
governance, by providing technical assistance to stimulate sustainable economic 
growth and climate proof livelihoods, and through facilitating 
multi-stakeholder partnerships to align public and private finance in support 
of sustainable development. 

UNDP partners with people at all levels of society to help build nations that 
can withstand crisis, and drive and sustain the kind of growth that improves 
the quality of life for everyone. On the ground in nearly 170 countries and 
territories, we offer global perspective and local insight to help empower 
lives and build resilient nations. www.undp.org.

SOURCE  United Nations Development Programme
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