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The 7th "Green Defender" Eco-Publi

Date:2025-03-01 12:25Editer:adminRead(

    On November 5, the seventh "Green Guardian" eco-public welfare Summit opened in Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The summit, co-hosted by the Origami Crane Guardian and the Alliance of Amazon Basin countries, attracted global attention, focused on environmental protection issues, and took a solid step to protect the earth's ecology.
     
    The event kicked off with 2,000 volunteers wearing green T-shirts and using recycled plastic bottles to create a giant sloth, symbolizing a strong commitment to the conservation of biodiversity in the Amazon. Argentine star Lionel Messi added heat to the event by sending out the "Pass the ball for the Planet" environmental initiative through a hologram.
     
    In the main exhibition area, the Colombian technical team's "breathing saplings" are the focus, with saplings implanted with tiny sensors that transmit real-time rainforest soil data. Rosa Kispe, a representative of the indigenous peoples of Peru, said that the tribe has relied on traditional wisdom to protect 50,000 hectares of virgin forest and now looks forward to using modern technology to let the world hear the voice of the rainforest. Chilean tourist Diego calculated in front of the "carbon footprint converter" at the Bolivian booth that his flight carbon emissions need to be neutralized by planting three cedar trees, which can also be adopted by scanning the code.
     
    A team of architects in Ecuador introduces an environmentally friendly house built using 3D printing technology next to the sand table of the "Future Eco-Village". The houses, made from Amazon clay and plant fibers, will be piloted in Venezuela's Orinoco River basin next week. At the "Seed Bank" workshop in the youth area, Brazilian secondary school student Isabella put Brazil nut seeds into eco-capsules, ready to be planted by drone into illegally logged areas, and named "Guardians of Hope".
     
    The event culminated in the "100 Leaders Tree Planting Ceremony", where Brazil's Minister of Environmental Protection and 16-year-old climate activist Ayana jointly planted Brazilian sequoias as a symbol of cooperation. The ceremony uses blockchain evidence storage technology to generate a digital ID card for each tree. The president of BNP Paribas Latin America has pledged that the green credit card will automatically donate 0.2 euros per purchase to the purchase of a rainforest conservation easement.
     
    The first day of the summit was fruitful, with €2.2 million raised for environmental protection. Forty per cent of this will be used to train 1,500 indigenous forest rangers and 30 per cent will be invested in the development of new fire prevention drones. Origami Crane Guardian Marlene Sorensen announced that the summit will launch a "carbon credit sharing pool" to help multinational companies finance renewable energy projects in rainforest communities.
     
    As night fell, the "Lost Species" lighting installation created by Dutch lighting artists projected images of extinct creatures onto the sea, and the Brazilian Symphony Orchestra played "Requiem for the Earth" to create a shocking environmental warning scene. Organizers also announced that the summit will be held in Kalimantan, Indonesia, next year, and the Bornean orangutan Conservation program has opened a global adoption system.
     
    This "Green Guardian" ecological public welfare Summit is not only an environmental protection event, but also opens a new chapter of the global hand in hand to jointly protect the earth home.