Protestors the world over, from
cities all across Brazil to those gathered outside the G& meeting in
Biarritz, France, have raised the alarm bell over the new laissez faire
policies in Brazil where destroying forests to allow for agricultural expansion
has redefined Amazonia. 20% of the earth’s source of refreshed oxygen emanates from
the Amazon. The new government in Brazil has castigated international outrage
at the exploding use of slash and burn fires to expand agricultural uses as
none of anyone’s business except Brazil’s.
“[Deforestation] rates have increased
sharply since May, a few months after [Brazil’s anti-environmental, right-wing
President Jair] Bolsonaro took office. So far, more than 2,000 square miles of
forest have fallen this year.
“Bolsonaro has railed against
protections for indigenous land and promised to boost the country’s economy. He
has also weakened the government’s capacity for oversight and indicated he
would not go after farmers, loggers and miners who seize and clear forest… Some
say his words have been enough to trigger a burst of deforestation. (Government
representatives did not respond to requests for comment.)…
“Flames are spreading across the
Amazon rainforest this summer, spewing millions of tons of carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere each day. But scientists say that’s not their biggest concern.
They’re far more worried about what the fires represent: a dramatic increase in
illegal deforestation that could deprive the world of a critical buffer against
climate change.
“More than a soccer field’s worth of
Amazon forest is falling every minute, according to Brazil’s National Institute
for Space Research, known as INPE. Preliminary estimates from satellite data
revealed that deforestation in June rose almost 90% compared with the same
month last year, and by 280% in July… The Amazon is a key component of Earth’s
climate system. It holds about a quarter as much carbon as the entire
atmosphere and single-handedly absorbs about 5% of all the CO2 we emit each
year.
“But if such rapid deforestation
continues, it will foil efforts to keep global temperatures in check.
Scientists fear parts of the Amazon could pass a critical threshold and
transform from a lush rainforest into a dry, woody grassland. And that could
bring catastrophic consequences not only for people in South America, but also
for everyone around the world.
“‘We might be very, very close to the
tipping point,’ said Carlos Nobre , a climate scientist at the University of
Sao Paulo in Brazil. And if we cross it, he said, ‘it’s irreversible.’… The
trend is particularly alarming because it comes after more than a decade of
progress toward preserving the world’s largest rainforest. Many blame the
anti-environmental rhetoric of Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil’s new far-right
president, and fear that it will put global climate efforts in jeopardy.
“Left to nature, the Amazon rarely
burns. But INPE has counted more than 25,000 blazes in the Amazon in August
alone. The smoke grew so thick it cast the city of Sao Paulo, which lies more
than 1,000 miles away, into daytime darkness.
“The fires have sparked an
international outcry. But they came as no surprise to those who keep a close
watch on the Amazon. Satellite images in May, June and July showed an uptick in
deforestation. It was only a matter of time before the flames followed, said
Doug Morton , chief of the Biospheric Sciences Laboratory at NASA’s Goddard
Space Flight Center… ‘This is the expected one-two punch,’ he said.
“Instead of axes and machetes, people
now use bulldozers and giant tractors with chains to pull down the Amazon’s
towering trees. A few months later, they torch the trunks. It’s the only
realistic way to remove such huge amounts of biomass, Morton said. ‘It’s slash
and burn, 21st century.’
“‘Thousands of acres at a time are
being cleared for large-scale agriculture, he added. The land is primarily used
as pasture for cattle — one of Brazil’s major exports — or for crops such as
soybeans… This marks a troubling reversal in the fight to end deforestation,
long a linchpin of global climate policy.
“In 2004, the Brazilian government
began cracking down on forest destruction by designating more protected areas
and reserves for indigenous people. Violators were fined or arrested and forest
loss declined 75% by 2012… What’s more, the country’s agricultural production
continued to increase, demonstrating that development and conservation could go
hand in hand, said Nobre, who has been studying the Amazon for more than 35
years… ‘It was a big success,’ he said. ‘Everybody was happy.’… However,
deforestation rates have increased sharply since May, a few months after
Bolsonaro took office. So far, more than 2,000 square miles of forest have
fallen this year.” Los Angeles Times, August 26th.
But even the Trump-inspired Bolsonaro
took notice of the growing unrest on the streets of his own biggest cities
(above right – protests in Sao Paulo), and began efforts to extinguish the very
fires his policies have encouraged. The protests were getting so large that
even Bolsonaro feared his political future hinged on a more moderate
environmental tone. The military combined with international forces have begun
to contain the fires. While so much damage has already been done that the net
negative impact on global climate change may have triggered the point of no
return, nations out of step with global priorities to make the earth livable
and sustainable by containing global warming are finding themselves increasing
isolated and shunned. Like Donald Trump and the United States.
“U.S. President Donald Trump skipped a discussion on climate with other
world leaders at the Group of Seven summit in France, leaving an empty chair as
global power brokers debated how to help the fire-ravaged
Amazon and
reduce carbon emissions.” Associated Press, August 26th.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and that the G7 did not even put a joint communique on the agenda
because of outlier Donald Trump tells you what those economic powers think of
the United States these days.
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