Along these lines, he maintained that “wetlands are a fundamental resource not only at an environmental level, but also at a socio-economic, cultural and productive level, so that when legislating on the subject, this complexity must be considered, so as not to take a measure that only pursues a political position.
The entity stated that “as regards fire management and environmental protection, there are various laws, in force and adequate, such as 25675 (general environment), 25335 (ratification of the RAMSAR convention), 25688 (environmental water management), 26815 (fire management) and 26652 (controlled burning).”
“The most serious problem we have as a country is that the state does not adequately fulfill its obligations to control and reliably apply these regulations,” the FAA emphasized.
The entity stated that “advancing towards regulatory contamination, resulting from political hurdles and not from a serious and comprehensive approach to these ecosystems, is not a good alternative, because instead of solving problems they will create others.”
In this regard, FAA highlighted the importance of the National State and the provincial states advancing in the reliable application and observance of these regulations, as well as ending the easy approaches that seek to demonize agricultural producers.
The entity stressed that “around 20% of the territory of our country falls under the denomination of wetlands. The impact of new legislation will be crucial, so the debates or possible new regulations must be carried out with total seriousness and understanding the real impact” .
PR/MAC
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NA 21-09-22 20:48:01
Source: Ambito

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