Published June 10, 2010
Whether they've looked at the trees, the insects, or the jaguars, scientists have agreed that Yasunà National Park (map) in Ecuador's Amazonian rain forest is one of the most diverse places on earth. But nature left one thing underground that could seal the fate of all that life above: Nearly one billion barrels of oil.
In the coming weeks, Ecuador aims to sign a unique agreement to forgo drilling for oil in a huge plot of this rain forest in exchange for money. The idea is that contributions from industrialized nations and, potentially, from corporations would make up for the badly needed petroleum revenue that the South American nation would lose by keeping the fossil fuel underground...
Read the full post at National Geographic.
This reporting was sponsored in part by a grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.