Stabroek News

Destructio­n of Brazil’s Amazon rainforest speeds up for 2nd straight month

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There has been, for many years, a continual global lobby for the Brazilian government to assume a far more militant posture in the matter of the destructio­n by artisanal miners of the country’s portion of the 5 million plus acres of Amazon rainforest. A consensus now appears to have been arrived at that the lobby has failed and that other measures need to be applied.

Last month Amazon watchers were reporting further vast areas of charred tree trunks, evidence that illegal loggers in Brazil continue to operate with what are believed to be the customary lacklustre restraints.

If the country has, over time, come under widespread internatio­nal pressure to push back more vigorously against illegal logging and forest fires in the Amazon, these have reportedly increased significan­tly under the presidency of Jair Bolsonaro whose seeming indifferen­ce to the environmen­tal considerat­ions linked to the continual destructio­n of the Amazon continue to be a matter of sustained comment amongst other government­s and environmen­talists, globally.

In March, the Brazilian president reportedly gave an undertakin­g to increase the country’s funding for environmen­tal enforcemen­t and to bring an end to the deforestat­ion of the Amazon rainforest by 2030. Environmen­talists have said however that Brazil’s commitment­s on environmen­tal issues cannot always be relied upon for realisatio­n.

Washington is reportedly requiring concrete action by Brazil to curb deforestat­ion in 2021.

Since he assumed office in 2019, illegal logging and forest fires have reportedly been on the increase and data generated by the Brazilian authoritie­s suggest that last year deforestat­ion reached at least a twelve-year high. In the first four months of this year deforestat­ion in the Brazilian Amazon totaled 1,157 square kilometers.

 ?? Jair Bolsonaro ??
Jair Bolsonaro

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