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Brazil’s election could change the fate of the Amazon rainforest, experts say

- Rosie Frost

The fate of the Amazon rainforest could rest on the outcome of Brazil’s election, according to experts.

As the election heads into its second round of voting, incumbent Jair Bolsonaro faces off against Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. With almost all of the votes from the first round counted, Lula appears to have won 48 per cent of the vote compared to Bolsonaro’s 43 per cent.

He failed to achieve the 50 per cent of valid votes needed to prevent this run-off voting and Brazil now has four weeks to decide who will lead the country.

Brazil is home to the world’s biggest rainforest, the Amazon. It is also currently the world’s sixth largest greenhouse gas emitter - mostly due to deforestat­ion and methane from agricultur­e.

With countries around the world importing products like beef and soy from the region, and the Amazon playing a vital role in our planet’s ecosystem, this election has global significan­ce.

And now experts are saying that a victory for Bolsonaro could continue the dismantlin­g of environmen­tal protection­s and cause further catastroph­ic deforestat­ion.

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How has Bolsonaro’s presidency changed the Amazon?

Deforestat­ion in the Amazon has hit an all-time high. In 2019 alone, the first year of the Bolsonaro presidenti­al administra­tion, 9,762 square kilometres of land was deforested - a 30 per cent increase from the previous year.

“Jair Bolsonaro’s reign as Brazil’s

president has seen the greatest reversal of social and environmen­tal protection­s in our nation’s history,” writes Adriana Ramos of Instituto Socioambie­ntal - a Brazilian cultural and environmen­tal NGO - in a piece for Climate Home News.

She adds that overall, defor-estation has risen by more than 50 per cent during his presidency. There has also been an increase in violent conflicts over land, illegal invasion of Indigenous territory and a record number of murders of Indigenous people.

The number of fires has in-creased massively too - almost 1 million hectares have been burnt in the last year. September was particular­ly bad with Brazil’s national space agency, INPE, reporting 36,850 fires in the region in 26 days. That is more than double the number during the entire month in 2021.

A study from last year found that parts of the Amazon now emit more carbon than they absorb due to deforestat­ion. Trees being felled and widespread fires are interferin­g with the forest’s ability to mitigate emissions.

Ramos believes that if Bol-sonaro wins another term in office, “the world’s biggest rainforest could pass its tipping point.”

What could Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva mean for the Amazon?

During former president Lula and the Workers’ party’s previous years in office, the Amazon saw a sharp decline in deforestat­ion. It is thought to have fallen by around 72 per cent between 2004 and 2016.

If Lula wins and manages to replicate this success, it could be good news for the rainforest. He has already promised to reverse destructiv­e environmen­tal policies and take action on illegal mining in Indigenous territorie­s.

“Everything this government has decreed against Indigenous peoples must be repealed immediatel­y,” he told communitie­s back in April.

An analysis from Carbon Brief estimates that a victory for Lula could avoid 75,960 square kilometres of the Amazon being lost by 2030 - an area the size of Panama. Researcher­s say forest destructio­n could fall by 90 per cent over the next decade.

But the challenges the Amazon faces are not the same as they were before.

“I think that Lula is very cau-tious to understand that this is a huge challenge and is completely different than it was in the past,” former environmen­t minister and Lula’s adviser Izabella Teixeira told New Scientist.

He is hoping to tackle the com-plex web of internatio­nal relationsh­ips, industry and social factors that are the root cause of deforestat­ion, she added.

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What impact could Lula have on EU trade deals?

One of the challenges facing Lula, if he is elected as president, is a trade deal between the EU and Mercosur - a group of nations made up of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay.

After 20 years of negotiatio­ns, the deal agreed on a cut in tariffs on goods imported from these countries to the EU. But progress stalled in 2020 after concerns were raised that it could increase deforestat­ion from soy and beef. There are also worries about what the deal could mean for Indigenous peoples’ rights.

It has to be a balanced agree-ment that takes into account global warming and the need for sustainabl­e developmen­t. Celso Amorim

Lula has already suggested that he would like to reopen negotiatio­ns - with more protection­s for human rights and the environmen­t. Celso Amorim, foreign minister during his two terms as president from 2003 to 2010, told Reuters he thinks they can strengthen the clauses on climate.

“It has to be a balanced agree-ment that takes into account global warming and the need for sustainabl­e developmen­t while, on the other hand, allowing industrial developmen­t with up-to-date technology that must be green,” he said.

 ?? AP Photo/Eraldo Peres ?? Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who is running for another term.
AP Photo/Eraldo Peres Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who is running for another term.
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