Russia's first lunar mission in 47 years smashes into the moon in failure

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Almost 59 percent of voters chose to halt the exploitation of an oil block in Yasuni National Park, one of the most diverse biospheres in the world.

"This is a historic victory for Ecuador and the planet," environmental group Yasunidos posted on social media.

"This consultation, born from citizens, shows great national consensus in Ecuador. It is the first time a country has decided to protect life and leave oil in the ground."

The referendum took place alongside a first-round presidential election held under heavy security, with an explosion of violence linked to the drug trade dominating voter concerns.

Members of the Waorani indigenous community pushed hard for a 'Yes' vote in the referendum © Martin BERNETTI / AFP/File

Voters also chose to ban mining in parts of the Choco Andes forest in a second referendum.

Oil exploitation has been one of the pillars of Ecuador's economy since the 1970s.

Crude oil, its leading export, generated revenues of $10 billion in 2022, around 10 percent of gross domestic product.

Nearly 500,000 barrels are produced daily in the northeastern Amazon, below the Andes, blighting the environment with wells, pipelines, and flames shooting into the air.

The industry has been a boon to state coffers and development, but environmentalists decry terrible pollution.

Drilling in Yasuni began in 2016 after years of fraught debate and failed efforts by then-president Rafael Correa to persuade the international community to pay cash-strapped Ecuador $3.6 billion not to drill there.

The block is situated in a reserve which stretches over one million hectares (2.5 million acres) and is home to three of the world's last uncontacted Indigenous populations and a bounty of plant and animal species.

The reserve is home to the Waorani and Kichwa tribes, as well as the Tagaeri, Taromenane and Dugakaeri, who choose to live isolated from the modern world.

The reserve is home to the Waorani and Kichwa tribes, as well as the Tagaeri, Taromenane and Dugakaeri, who choose to live isolated from the modern world © Galo Paguay / AFP/File

After years of demands for a referendum, the country's highest court authorized the vote in May to decide the fate of "block 43," which contributes 12 percent of the 466,000 barrels of oil per day produced by Ecuador.

The government of outgoing President Guillermo Lasso estimated a loss of $16 billion over the next 20 years if drilling were halted.

Several much older blocks exist in the north of Yasuni, but they are almost depleted.

"Ecuador has become the first country in the world to stop oil exploitation due to direct climate democracy," said a joint statement from climate organizations, including Yasunidos and Amazon Frontlines.

Rainforests are often called the "lungs of the Earth," soaking up planet-warming carbon dioxide and expelling life-giving oxygen. Their protection is crucial in the battle to combat climate change.

Scientists warn destruction of the Amazon is pushing the world's biggest rainforest close to a tipping point beyond which trees would die off and release carbon rather than absorb it, with catastrophic consequences for the climate.

"The Yasuni has been like a mother to the world... We need to raise our voices and hands so that our mother can recover, that she is not injured, that she is not beaten," Alicia Cahuiya, a Waorani leader born in the heart of the jungle, said before the vote.

Gas flares from a refinery are seen in the Waorani Community of Bameno, Ecuador in July 2023 © Galo Paguay / AFP/File

The fate of the reserve drew the attention of celebrities such as Hollywood star and environmental activist Leonardo DiCaprio and Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg, who both pushed for a "Yes" vote.

Locals in Yasuni were divided, with some supporting the oil companies and the benefits that economic growth have brought to their villages.

FoxyInTheSnow on August 21st, 2023 at 20:23 UTC »

I do enjoy a ridiculously expensive metaphor.

KeyanReid on August 21st, 2023 at 19:40 UTC »

Corruption is a bitch. There's a reason why healthy societies work so hard to safeguard against it. You can never stop it completely, but investing the energy in fighting it is necessary to avoid becoming what Russia has.

The corruption there isn't new, but it's flourished under Putin, and now their space program cannot accomplish what it could have arguably done 50 years ago. All that space funding disappeared to billionaires and the palms they grease to keep it coming their way.

America will follow if we don't change course. Just because a corrupt supreme court legalized it with Citizens United, it doesn't mean the effects of bribery and corruption are any less corrosive (to the contrary, we can see how quickly it flooded everything the moment a single safeguard was broken). We can see today how our own systems are betraying us and stealing our taxes for the wealthy and lawless. Continue that long enough and we too will find all our programs rotting from the inside out

mrkruk on August 21st, 2023 at 19:13 UTC »

Unplanned rapid lunar descent