The Sunday Guardian

Amazon deforestat­ion climbs more than 100%

Deforestat­ion reached highest level for the month of November.

- REUTERS SAO PAULO

Deforestat­ion in Brazil’s Amazon jumped to the highest level for the month of November since record-keeping began in 2015, according to preliminar­y government data published on Friday.

Destructio­n of the world’s largest tropical rainforest totalled 563 square km (217.38 square miles) in November, 103% more than in the same month last year, according to the country’s space research agency INPE.

That would bring total deforestat­ion for the period from January to November to 8,934 square km, 83% more than in the same period in 2018 and an area almost the size of Puerto Rico.

The data released by INPE was collected through the

DETER database, a system that publishes alerts on fires and other types of developmen­ts affecting the rainforest.

The DETER numbers are not considered official deforestat­ion data. That comes from a different system called PRODES, also managed by INPE. PRODES numbers released last month showed deforestat­ion rose to its highest in over a decade this year, jumping 30% from 2018 to 9,762 square km.

Deforestat­ion usually slows around November and December during the Amazon region’s rainy season.

The number for last month was unusually high.

Researcher­s and environmen­talists blame rightwing President Jair Bolsonaro for emboldenin­g ranchers and loggers by calling for the Amazon to be developed and for weakening the environmen­tal agency Ibama.

Bolsonaro and Environmen­t Minister Ricardo Salles have said previous government­s played a role in deforestat­ion’s increase, saying policies including budget cuts at agencies like Ibama were in place well before the new government took office on 1 Jan.

Brazil’s Environmen­t Ministry had no immediate comment on Friday on the DETER data for November.

 ??  ?? Jair Bolsonaro
Jair Bolsonaro

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