Through technology, we get to observe a number of species and behavior types we’d never be able to monitor by natural means. […] Technology won’t keep us from having to do fieldwork, but it serves as a kind of seventh sense for us,
Forests flanking Brazil's rivers act as "highways" that have allowed tree species to move between the Amazon and Atlantic rainforests for millions of years, new research shows.
Once estimated as 20,000 in the territory, hundreds of illegal miners still remain and may expand business at the slightest sign of the security forces withdrawing.
An extensive new exhibition at the CCCB in Barcelona takes a look at the art, culture, biodiversity and history of the Amazon and its indigenous peoples. A multi-sensory experience featuring video, paintings,
Banco do Brasil's sustainable credit portfolio is subject to independent evaluation and adheres to international criteria for defining projects of this nature.
Travel agents registering on the Brazil Travel Specialist website by March 2025 are entered into a draw to win LATAM flights
HKFP showcases its best features, interviews, scoops, and explanatory reporting from 2024 - made possible thanks to our monthly donors.
Iberdrola has signed a power purchase agreement ( PPA) with AGRATI Group, which specializes in the production of fastening systems and mechanical components. Starting in 2025, AGRATI will purchase all the electricity generated by the Florembeau wind farm, located in the commune of Créquy, in the Pas-de-Calais region.
The Trump administration’s first flight deporting Brazilians involved aborted takeoffs, sweltering heat, emergency exits and shackled deportees on a wing.
The Brazilian government says it is going to create a reception center for deported migrants from the United States following controversy over conditions on a recent flight.
The burned area is larger than the territory of Italy and the largest since 2019. Most of the Brazilian territory consumed by fire (73%) consisted of native vegetation, mainly forest formations.
The vast Amazon rainforest bore the brunt of the devastation, accounting for approximately 17.9 million hectares of the total burned area, which is 58% of the overall destruction.