La preservación de bosques nativos también involucra a las compañías
La Argentina perdió una hectárea de bosque cada dos minutos
Según cifras de Banco de Bosques, en los últimos 25 años, la Argentina perdió una hectárea de bosque cada dos minutos. Como resultado, ya se perdió el 70% de los bosques nativos. Muchas empresas prestaron atención a la alarmante cifra y desarrollaron alianzas para atender esta problemática. El desarrollo de programas vinculados a la preservación y regeneración de ecosistemas que permite evitar inundaciones, suelos desérticos y que el país siga teniendo recursos naturales que son vitales para la vida. Crear nuevas áreas protegidas o regenerar ecosistemas es una tarea a compromete no sólo a fundaciones u organismos públicos sino también a empresas.

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Free seminar on the implementation of the European EUDR regulation on deforestation-free wood products
The Argentine Forestry Association (AFoA) organizes the seminar «EUDR in Forest Products: Current status of implementation. Regulatory requirements and private experiences", which will take place on Wednesday, November 26, from 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., via Zoom, with live streaming on YouTube. The European Regulation on Deforestation-Free Products (EUDR) will enter into force on December 31, 2025 and will impose new requirements for forest products entering the European Union market.
The forest of the oldest shadows: the story of the petrified trees
One of the natural treasures of Río Negro turns 23 years old under the protection law that allows its conservation. Where it is and how it was formed. Río Negro celebrates 23 years of conservation in the petrified forest as a Protected Natural Area (ANP). It is a space of 625 hectares that protects an exceptional site of fossil trunks that date back more than 60 million years.
Experts cant believe it, but this tree is the oldest in the world and continues to bear fruit: it is 4,000 years old.
Nature keeps secrets that defy the passage of time, and one of the most surprising examples is a tree that, approximately 4,000 years old, continues to bear fruit today. This specimen has become a symbol of resistance and longevity, capable of surviving climate changes, landscape transformations and human activity itself.





















