The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing rivers

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Abramovay, Ricardo
Data de Publicação: 2021
Outros Autores: Ferreira, Joice, Costa, Francisco de Assis, Ehrlich, Marco, Euler, Ana Margarida Castro, Young, Carlos Eduardo Frickmann, Kaimowitz, David, Moutinho, Paulo, Nobre, Ismael, Rogez, Herve, Roxo, Eduardo, Schor, Tatiana, Villanova, Luciana
Tipo de documento: Capítulo de livro
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional da UFRJ
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/11422/21576
Resumo: In the past twenty years, the bioeconomy has been increasingly recognized for its potential to create value and its contribution to sustainable development. Although most of the world’s biodiversity is located in tropical regions, the main players generating scientific and technological literature on the bioeconomy are situated far from tropical forests. The chapter’s fundamental starting point is the recognition that the Amazon’s ecosystems have been occupied by people who have accumulated a deep knowledge about them, interacting and decisively contributing to its maintenance for thousands of years. It is critical to understand, highlight, and demonstrate the strategic role that Amazonian ecosystems and local people can and should play in the global emergence of the bioeconomy. Evidence is accumulating on the enormous potential to produce a range of products and improve the well-being of people from these forests. This strategic role is not straightforward because of the natural attributes of their ecosystems: a sustainable pathway to the bioeconomy has yet to be built, and should go through several fundamental elements, including: a) Recognition that, by ethical principles, strengthening the forest economy should support the improvement of local livelihoods; b) Institutional signaling against illegality and deforestation; c) Improvement in the quality of information about different products and their value chains; and d) Provoking the emergence of dynamic markets as alternatives to the incomplete, socially unfair, and imperfect markets that dominate the forest economy today. This chapter paves the way for a new vision of a healthy, standing forest and flowing river bioeconomy. First, it presents the bioeconomy as a recent field with no unified definition in international literature. After this, it describes how the bioeconomy of forest sociobiodiversity in the Amazon is still very limited. The low economic efficiency of current ways of using the forest is discussed, and the current economic exploitation of forest socio-biodiversity in three basic sectors are presented: timber, non-timber products, and fishing. Then, the following services related to the bioeconomy are presented: synergies with forest restoration, tourism, and payment for ecosystem services. Finally, it discusses the transition needed for healthy, standing forests and flowing rivers to become a vector for the prosperity of populations and solutions for global socio-environmental challenges.
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spelling The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing riversAmazonBioeconomyAmazôniaBioeconomiaCNPQ::CIENCIAS SOCIAIS APLICADAS::ECONOMIA::ECONOMIAS AGRARIA E DOS RECURSOS NATURAIS::ECONOMIA DOS RECURSOS NATURAISCNPQ::CIENCIAS AGRARIAS::RECURSOS FLORESTAIS E ENGENHARIA FLORESTAL::CONSERVACAO DA NATUREZACNPQ::CIENCIAS AGRARIAS::RECURSOS FLORESTAIS E ENGENHARIA FLORESTAL::MANEJO FLORESTAL::ECONOMIA FLORESTALIn the past twenty years, the bioeconomy has been increasingly recognized for its potential to create value and its contribution to sustainable development. Although most of the world’s biodiversity is located in tropical regions, the main players generating scientific and technological literature on the bioeconomy are situated far from tropical forests. The chapter’s fundamental starting point is the recognition that the Amazon’s ecosystems have been occupied by people who have accumulated a deep knowledge about them, interacting and decisively contributing to its maintenance for thousands of years. It is critical to understand, highlight, and demonstrate the strategic role that Amazonian ecosystems and local people can and should play in the global emergence of the bioeconomy. Evidence is accumulating on the enormous potential to produce a range of products and improve the well-being of people from these forests. This strategic role is not straightforward because of the natural attributes of their ecosystems: a sustainable pathway to the bioeconomy has yet to be built, and should go through several fundamental elements, including: a) Recognition that, by ethical principles, strengthening the forest economy should support the improvement of local livelihoods; b) Institutional signaling against illegality and deforestation; c) Improvement in the quality of information about different products and their value chains; and d) Provoking the emergence of dynamic markets as alternatives to the incomplete, socially unfair, and imperfect markets that dominate the forest economy today. This chapter paves the way for a new vision of a healthy, standing forest and flowing river bioeconomy. First, it presents the bioeconomy as a recent field with no unified definition in international literature. After this, it describes how the bioeconomy of forest sociobiodiversity in the Amazon is still very limited. The low economic efficiency of current ways of using the forest is discussed, and the current economic exploitation of forest socio-biodiversity in three basic sectors are presented: timber, non-timber products, and fishing. Then, the following services related to the bioeconomy are presented: synergies with forest restoration, tourism, and payment for ecosystem services. Finally, it discusses the transition needed for healthy, standing forests and flowing rivers to become a vector for the prosperity of populations and solutions for global socio-environmental challenges.Nos últimos vinte anos, a bioeconomia tem sido cada vez mais reconhecida pelo seu potencial de criação de valor e pela sua contribuição para o desenvolvimento sustentável. Embora a maior parte da biodiversidade mundial esteja localizada em regiões tropicais, os principais atores que geram literatura científica e tecnológica sobre a bioeconomia estão situados longe das florestas tropicais. O ponto de partida fundamental deste capítulo é o reconhecimento de que os ecossistemas da Amazónia têm sido ocupados por pessoas que acumularam um profundo conhecimento sobre eles, interagindo e contribuindo decisivamente para a sua manutenção ao longo de milhares de anos. É fundamental compreender, destacar e demonstrar o papel estratégico que os ecossistemas amazónicos e as populações locais podem e devem desempenhar na emergência global da bioeconomia. Estão a acumular-se provas do enorme potencial de produção de uma série de produtos e de melhoria do bem-estar das populações a partir destas florestas. Este papel estratégico não é simples devido aos atributos naturais dos seus ecossistemas: está ainda por construir uma via sustentável para a bioeconomia, que deverá passar por vários elementos fundamentais, nomeadamente a) O reconhecimento de que, por princípios éticos, o fortalecimento da economia florestal deve apoiar a melhoria dos meios de vida locais; b) A sinalização institucional contra a ilegalidade e o desmatamento; c) A melhoria da qualidade da informação sobre os diferentes produtos e suas cadeias de valor; e d) Provocar o surgimento de mercados dinâmicos como alternativas aos mercados incompletos, socialmente injustos e imperfeitos que dominam a economia florestal atualmente. Este capítulo abre caminho para uma nova visão de uma bioeconomia saudável, com florestas em pé e rios caudalosos. Primeiro, apresenta a bioeconomia como um campo recente, sem uma definição unificada na literatura internacional. Depois, descreve como a bioeconomia da sociobiodiversidade florestal na Amazónia é ainda muito limitada. Discute-se a baixa eficiência económica das atuais formas de utilização da floresta e apresenta-se a atual exploração económica da sociobiodiversidade florestal em três sectores básicos: madeira, produtos não-madeireiros e pesca. Em seguida, são apresentados os seguintes serviços relacionados com a bioeconomia: sinergias com a restauração florestal, turismo e pagamento por serviços ecossistêmicos. Por fim, discute-se a transição necessária para que florestas saudáveis e em pé e rios caudalosos se tornem um vetor de prosperidade das populações e soluções para os desafios socioambientais globais.United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions NetworkEstados unidosInstituto de EconomiaSDSN2023-09-13T21:25:38Z2023-12-21T03:02:06Z2021info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/bookPartAbramovay R, Ferreira J, Costa FA, Ehrlich M, Euler AMC, Young CEF, Kaimowitz D, Moutinho P, Nobre I, Rogez H, Roxo E, Schor T, Villanova L. 2021. Chapter 30: The New Bioeconomy in the Amazon: Opportunities and Challenges for a Healthy Standing Forest and Flowing Rivers. In: Nobre C, Encalada A, Anderson E, Roca Alcazar FH, Bustamante M, Mena C, PeñaClaros M, Poveda G, Rodriguez JP, Saleska S, Trumbore S, Val AL, Villa Nova L, Abramovay R, Alencar A, Rodríguez Alzza C, Armenteras D, Artaxo P, Athayde S, Barretto Filho HT, Barlow J, Berenguer E, Bortolotto F, Costa FA, Costa MH, Cuvi N, Fearnside PM, Ferreira J, Flores BM, Frieri S, Gatti LV, Guayasamin JM, Hecht S, Hirota M, Hoorn C, Josse C, Lapola DM, Larrea C, Larrea-Alcazar DM, Lehm Ardaya Z, Malhi Y, Marengo JA, Melack J, Moraes R M, Moutinho P, Murmis MR, Neves EG, Paez B, Painter L, Ramos A, Rosero-Peña MC, Schmink M, Sist P, ter Steege H, Val P, van der Voort H, Varese M, Zapata-Ríos G (Eds). Amazon Assessment Report 2021. United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network, New York, USA. Available from https://www.theamazonwewant.org/spa-reports/. DOI: 10.55161/UGHK19689781734808001http://hdl.handle.net/11422/21576engAmazon Assessment Report 2021Abramovay, RicardoFerreira, JoiceCosta, Francisco de AssisEhrlich, MarcoEuler, Ana Margarida CastroYoung, Carlos Eduardo FrickmannKaimowitz, DavidMoutinho, PauloNobre, IsmaelRogez, HerveRoxo, EduardoSchor, TatianaVillanova, Lucianainfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRJinstname:Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)instacron:UFRJ2023-12-21T03:02:06Zoai:pantheon.ufrj.br:11422/21576Repositório InstitucionalPUBhttp://www.pantheon.ufrj.br/oai/requestpantheon@sibi.ufrj.bropendoar:2023-12-21T03:02:06Repositório Institucional da UFRJ - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing rivers
title The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing rivers
spellingShingle The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing rivers
Abramovay, Ricardo
Amazon
Bioeconomy
Amazônia
Bioeconomia
CNPQ::CIENCIAS SOCIAIS APLICADAS::ECONOMIA::ECONOMIAS AGRARIA E DOS RECURSOS NATURAIS::ECONOMIA DOS RECURSOS NATURAIS
CNPQ::CIENCIAS AGRARIAS::RECURSOS FLORESTAIS E ENGENHARIA FLORESTAL::CONSERVACAO DA NATUREZA
CNPQ::CIENCIAS AGRARIAS::RECURSOS FLORESTAIS E ENGENHARIA FLORESTAL::MANEJO FLORESTAL::ECONOMIA FLORESTAL
title_short The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing rivers
title_full The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing rivers
title_fullStr The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing rivers
title_full_unstemmed The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing rivers
title_sort The new bioeconomy in the Amazon: opportunities and challenges for a healthy standing forest and flowing rivers
author Abramovay, Ricardo
author_facet Abramovay, Ricardo
Ferreira, Joice
Costa, Francisco de Assis
Ehrlich, Marco
Euler, Ana Margarida Castro
Young, Carlos Eduardo Frickmann
Kaimowitz, David
Moutinho, Paulo
Nobre, Ismael
Rogez, Herve
Roxo, Eduardo
Schor, Tatiana
Villanova, Luciana
author_role author
author2 Ferreira, Joice
Costa, Francisco de Assis
Ehrlich, Marco
Euler, Ana Margarida Castro
Young, Carlos Eduardo Frickmann
Kaimowitz, David
Moutinho, Paulo
Nobre, Ismael
Rogez, Herve
Roxo, Eduardo
Schor, Tatiana
Villanova, Luciana
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Abramovay, Ricardo
Ferreira, Joice
Costa, Francisco de Assis
Ehrlich, Marco
Euler, Ana Margarida Castro
Young, Carlos Eduardo Frickmann
Kaimowitz, David
Moutinho, Paulo
Nobre, Ismael
Rogez, Herve
Roxo, Eduardo
Schor, Tatiana
Villanova, Luciana
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Amazon
Bioeconomy
Amazônia
Bioeconomia
CNPQ::CIENCIAS SOCIAIS APLICADAS::ECONOMIA::ECONOMIAS AGRARIA E DOS RECURSOS NATURAIS::ECONOMIA DOS RECURSOS NATURAIS
CNPQ::CIENCIAS AGRARIAS::RECURSOS FLORESTAIS E ENGENHARIA FLORESTAL::CONSERVACAO DA NATUREZA
CNPQ::CIENCIAS AGRARIAS::RECURSOS FLORESTAIS E ENGENHARIA FLORESTAL::MANEJO FLORESTAL::ECONOMIA FLORESTAL
topic Amazon
Bioeconomy
Amazônia
Bioeconomia
CNPQ::CIENCIAS SOCIAIS APLICADAS::ECONOMIA::ECONOMIAS AGRARIA E DOS RECURSOS NATURAIS::ECONOMIA DOS RECURSOS NATURAIS
CNPQ::CIENCIAS AGRARIAS::RECURSOS FLORESTAIS E ENGENHARIA FLORESTAL::CONSERVACAO DA NATUREZA
CNPQ::CIENCIAS AGRARIAS::RECURSOS FLORESTAIS E ENGENHARIA FLORESTAL::MANEJO FLORESTAL::ECONOMIA FLORESTAL
description In the past twenty years, the bioeconomy has been increasingly recognized for its potential to create value and its contribution to sustainable development. Although most of the world’s biodiversity is located in tropical regions, the main players generating scientific and technological literature on the bioeconomy are situated far from tropical forests. The chapter’s fundamental starting point is the recognition that the Amazon’s ecosystems have been occupied by people who have accumulated a deep knowledge about them, interacting and decisively contributing to its maintenance for thousands of years. It is critical to understand, highlight, and demonstrate the strategic role that Amazonian ecosystems and local people can and should play in the global emergence of the bioeconomy. Evidence is accumulating on the enormous potential to produce a range of products and improve the well-being of people from these forests. This strategic role is not straightforward because of the natural attributes of their ecosystems: a sustainable pathway to the bioeconomy has yet to be built, and should go through several fundamental elements, including: a) Recognition that, by ethical principles, strengthening the forest economy should support the improvement of local livelihoods; b) Institutional signaling against illegality and deforestation; c) Improvement in the quality of information about different products and their value chains; and d) Provoking the emergence of dynamic markets as alternatives to the incomplete, socially unfair, and imperfect markets that dominate the forest economy today. This chapter paves the way for a new vision of a healthy, standing forest and flowing river bioeconomy. First, it presents the bioeconomy as a recent field with no unified definition in international literature. After this, it describes how the bioeconomy of forest sociobiodiversity in the Amazon is still very limited. The low economic efficiency of current ways of using the forest is discussed, and the current economic exploitation of forest socio-biodiversity in three basic sectors are presented: timber, non-timber products, and fishing. Then, the following services related to the bioeconomy are presented: synergies with forest restoration, tourism, and payment for ecosystem services. Finally, it discusses the transition needed for healthy, standing forests and flowing rivers to become a vector for the prosperity of populations and solutions for global socio-environmental challenges.
publishDate 2021
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2021
2023-09-13T21:25:38Z
2023-12-21T03:02:06Z
dc.type.status.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
format bookPart
status_str publishedVersion
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv Abramovay R, Ferreira J, Costa FA, Ehrlich M, Euler AMC, Young CEF, Kaimowitz D, Moutinho P, Nobre I, Rogez H, Roxo E, Schor T, Villanova L. 2021. Chapter 30: The New Bioeconomy in the Amazon: Opportunities and Challenges for a Healthy Standing Forest and Flowing Rivers. In: Nobre C, Encalada A, Anderson E, Roca Alcazar FH, Bustamante M, Mena C, PeñaClaros M, Poveda G, Rodriguez JP, Saleska S, Trumbore S, Val AL, Villa Nova L, Abramovay R, Alencar A, Rodríguez Alzza C, Armenteras D, Artaxo P, Athayde S, Barretto Filho HT, Barlow J, Berenguer E, Bortolotto F, Costa FA, Costa MH, Cuvi N, Fearnside PM, Ferreira J, Flores BM, Frieri S, Gatti LV, Guayasamin JM, Hecht S, Hirota M, Hoorn C, Josse C, Lapola DM, Larrea C, Larrea-Alcazar DM, Lehm Ardaya Z, Malhi Y, Marengo JA, Melack J, Moraes R M, Moutinho P, Murmis MR, Neves EG, Paez B, Painter L, Ramos A, Rosero-Peña MC, Schmink M, Sist P, ter Steege H, Val P, van der Voort H, Varese M, Zapata-Ríos G (Eds). Amazon Assessment Report 2021. United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network, New York, USA. Available from https://www.theamazonwewant.org/spa-reports/. DOI: 10.55161/UGHK1968
9781734808001
http://hdl.handle.net/11422/21576
identifier_str_mv Abramovay R, Ferreira J, Costa FA, Ehrlich M, Euler AMC, Young CEF, Kaimowitz D, Moutinho P, Nobre I, Rogez H, Roxo E, Schor T, Villanova L. 2021. Chapter 30: The New Bioeconomy in the Amazon: Opportunities and Challenges for a Healthy Standing Forest and Flowing Rivers. In: Nobre C, Encalada A, Anderson E, Roca Alcazar FH, Bustamante M, Mena C, PeñaClaros M, Poveda G, Rodriguez JP, Saleska S, Trumbore S, Val AL, Villa Nova L, Abramovay R, Alencar A, Rodríguez Alzza C, Armenteras D, Artaxo P, Athayde S, Barretto Filho HT, Barlow J, Berenguer E, Bortolotto F, Costa FA, Costa MH, Cuvi N, Fearnside PM, Ferreira J, Flores BM, Frieri S, Gatti LV, Guayasamin JM, Hecht S, Hirota M, Hoorn C, Josse C, Lapola DM, Larrea C, Larrea-Alcazar DM, Lehm Ardaya Z, Malhi Y, Marengo JA, Melack J, Moraes R M, Moutinho P, Murmis MR, Neves EG, Paez B, Painter L, Ramos A, Rosero-Peña MC, Schmink M, Sist P, ter Steege H, Val P, van der Voort H, Varese M, Zapata-Ríos G (Eds). Amazon Assessment Report 2021. United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network, New York, USA. Available from https://www.theamazonwewant.org/spa-reports/. DOI: 10.55161/UGHK1968
9781734808001
url http://hdl.handle.net/11422/21576
dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv eng
language eng
dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv Amazon Assessment Report 2021
dc.rights.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network
Estados unidos
Instituto de Economia
SDSN
publisher.none.fl_str_mv United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network
Estados unidos
Instituto de Economia
SDSN
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv reponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRJ
instname:Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)
instacron:UFRJ
instname_str Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)
instacron_str UFRJ
institution UFRJ
reponame_str Repositório Institucional da UFRJ
collection Repositório Institucional da UFRJ
repository.name.fl_str_mv Repositório Institucional da UFRJ - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)
repository.mail.fl_str_mv pantheon@sibi.ufrj.br
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