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Wednesday, 5 June 2019
Deforestation of Brazilian Amazon surges to record high
Inspectors walk through an area affected by illegal mining in Pará state
in Brazil’s Amazon basin. The rainforest lost 739sq km during the 31
days of May
Photograph: Vinicius Mendonca/AP
Deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon surged last month to the
highest May level since the current monitoring method began, prompting
concerns that president Jair Bolsonaro is giving a free pass to illegal logging, farming and mining.
The world’s greatest rainforest – which is a vital provider of oxygen
and carbon sequestration – lost 739sq km during the 31 days, equivalent
to two football pitches every minute, according to data from the government’s satellite monitoring agency.
Although a single month is too short to confirm long-term trends, May
is considered an important guide because it marks the start of the dry
season, which is when most burning and other forms of forest clearance
are carried out.
Unless the government sends a clear signal it will not tolerate a
further acceleration, environmentalists fear there will be an increase
in the coming months that could make 2019 one of the worst years for
deforestation in recent memory.
“The government can’t deny these numbers from their own agency. The
question now is what they’ll do about it,” said Carlos Souza, of the
independent monitoring group Imazon. “By the end of July. we’ll have a clear idea of the impact of recent moves to dismantle environmental policies.”
Since the far-right Bolsonaro came to power in January, he has
weakened the environment ministry, loosened controls on economic
exploitation of the Amazon, halted demarcation of indigenous land and
encouraged mining and farming interests to expand in the region.
Since the president criticised the government’s main
monitoring agency as a “fines industry”, it has issued a fewer penalties
than at any time in 11 years and the number of inspection operations is
down 70% from last year.
His environment minister, Ricardo Salles, who was convicted for environmental fraud
and had never visited the Amazon region before this year, has further
undermined morale by failing to appoint regional chiefs and by firing
veteran inspectors. Earlier this week, Folha reported he was moving to privatise the satellite monitoring of the forest.
He has also vexed donors Norway and Germany by proposing to weaken the voice of civil society in deciding how the $1.3bn Amazon Fund is spent.
In congress, the dominant agricultural lobby is pushing for further relaxations, including the breakup of protected areas.
Bolsonaro’s oldest son, Flavio, who is a senator, recently proposed a
reform of the forest code that would remove the obligation of farmers
in the Amazon to maintain forest cover on 50-80% of their property. This
measure would reportedly open up
an area larger than Iran for extractive industries. A growing wave of
speculative land claims are being registered inside reserves, which is
putting more pressure on the boundaries.
“The spike in deforestation is depressing, but hardly surprising: you
have a government in Brazil who is dismantling nearly every
environmental policy put in place since 1992 and who is harassing
federal environmental agents, thus empowering environmental criminals,”
said Carlos Rittl, the executive secretary of the Climate Observatory, an NGO formed by a coalition of environmental groups. “However, we must wait and see how it will behave in June.”
Other factors might have contributed to the increase. The first few
months of this year were cloudy and rainy, which made satellite
monitoring more difficult, so some areas might have been missed by
earlier sweeps. The bad weather could also have prompted loggers and
farmers to delay land clearance until May. The economy, which is often a
driver of deforestation during period of high beef and soy prices, has
also been in the doldrums, though Bolsonaro has indicated that
agribusiness can help to lift Brazil towards positive growth.
In this regard, he is echoing and amplifying the message of his
predecessors as president, Dilma Rousseff and Michel Temer, both of whom
presided over periods of accelerated forest clearance as they became
reliant on the rural lobby and commodity exports to China and Europe.
Another factor is an expansion of infrastructure projects, including
roads and hydroelectric plants. The Brazilian state that suffered the
greatest deforestation last month was Pará, which is home to the BR163
road through the Amazon and the Belo Monte dam.
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