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New Brazil environment minister downplays misconduct conviction
by Staff Writers
Bras�lia (AFP) Dec 22, 2018

Brazil's incoming environment minister, Ricardo Salles, has said he will take up his post on January 1 despite being found guilty of "improbity" while heading the environment portfolio in Sao Paulo's state government.

He told Brazilian radio station Jovem Pan late Friday that the next president, Jair Bolsonaro, will keep him on as part of his team.

Bolsonaro easily won October elections and enjoys a 75-percent approval rating in large part because of his pledge to stamp out political corruption and has said several times he will remove anyone against whom such charges were proven.

But Salles said that while the judge in his case on Thursday fined him and stripped him of political rights for altering plans for an environmentally protected area in Sao Paulo state to favor business interests, it was more politics than wrongdoing.

"The president (elect) understands that this trial and the verdict was much more a political-ideological fight against the posture I adopted in the Secretariat than any sort of formal illegality," he said.

"There was no crime. There was no personal advantage for me. There was no prejudice," he told the radio.

Salles had been secretary for the environment in Sao Paulo state between 2016 and 2017. He was the last name added to Bolsonaro's ministerial list.

Bolsonaro has been criticized by environmental protection groups after attacking conservation and indigenous protection agencies. He sees the bodies as being zealous in their missions at the expense of mining and agricultural business interests.

In late November the Brazilian government canceled plans to host next year's COP25 United Nations global climate conference, a follow-on to this year's UN conference in Poland that

underscored the severity of climate change.

Brazil's foreign ministry cited "financial and budgetary restrictions" and the government transition, but Bolsonaro has long questioned the value of the Paris climate agreement to cap global warming.


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Maria's far-reaching effects on Puerto Rico's watersheds and forests
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 14, 2018
Find related stories on NSF's Critical Zone Observatories Sites. Find related stories on NSF's Long-Term Ecological Research Sites. With fierce winds and flooding rains, hurricanes can be disasters for people - and for ecosystems. These devastating storms have major effects on tropical forests, demolishing tree canopies and leaving behind debris that piles up in watershed streams and on forest floors. Scientists at the National Science Foundation (NSF) co-located Luquillo Critical Zone Obser ... read more

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