Bangkok Post

Amazon fires surge in July fuels fears

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BRASILIA: The number of forest fires in the Brazilian Amazon last month rose 28% from July 2019, satellite data showed on Saturday, fueling fears the world’s biggest rainforest will again be devastated by fires this year.

Brazil’s national space agency, INPE, identified 6,803 fires in the Amazon region in July 2020, up from 5,318 the year before.

The figure is all the more troubling given that 2019 was already a devastatin­g year for fires in the Amazon, triggering global outcry.

That has put pressure on Brazil, which holds about 60% of the Amazon basin region, to do more to protect the massive forest, seen as vital to containing the impact of climate change.

The fires are largely set to clear land illegally for farming, ranching and mining.

Activists accuse Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right climate change skeptic, of encouragin­g the deforestat­ion with calls to open up the rainforest to agricultur­e and industry.

Under internatio­nal pressure, Mr Bolsonaro has deployed the army to fight the fires and declared a moratorium on burning. But activists say that does not go far enough to address the roots of the problem.

Fires rose 77% on indigenous lands and 50% on protected nature reserves from July 2019, environmen­tal group Greenpeace said, showing how illegal activities are increasing­ly encroachin­g on those areas.

On July 30 alone, satellites detected 1,007 fires in the Amazon, INPE said.

That was the worst single day for fires in the month of July since 2005, said Greenpeace.

“More than 1,000 fires in a single day is a 15-year record and shows the government’s strategy of media-spectacle operations is not working on the ground,” Greenpeace spokesman Romulo Batista said in a statement.

“On paper, the fire moratorium prohibits burning, but it only works if there is also a response on the ground, with more patrols. Criminals aren’t known for obeying the law.”

Instead, the Bolsonaro administra­tion has slashed the budget, staff and programmes of environmen­tal authority IBAMA.

“Everything that was working was thrown out the window,” Erika Berenguer, an Amazon ecologist at Oxford and Lancaster Universiti­es, told AFP.

‘CONDITIONS RIPE’

Fire season in the Amazon typically runs from around June to October.

But fires are just part of the deforestat­ion picture.

The rest of the year, ranchers, farmers, miners and land speculator­s are clearing forest and preparing to burn it.

The first six months of 2020 were the worst on record for deforestat­ion in the Brazilian Amazon, with 3,069 square kilometers cleared, according to INPE data — an area bigger than the nation of Luxembourg.

If a significan­t portion of those felled trees burn in 2020, the result could be catastroph­ic, experts warn.

“I think August will be the make-orbreak month,” said Ms Berenguer.

Last year, the number of fires surged nearly 200% year-on-year in August, to 30,900, sending a thick haze of black smoke all the way to Sao Paulo, thousands of kilometers away, and causing worldwide alarm.

The number of fires has fallen since then, under increased scrutiny and pressure — including from companies and investors worried about the impact on Brazil’s brand.

But Ms Berenguer said it was a matter of time before the newly deforested land went up in flames in the name of farming and ranching.

“It’s an economic investment to deforest. It’s expensive .... You need heavy machinery: bulldozers, tractors, people, diesel,” she said. “You don’t deforest to leave all those trees on the ground. You need to burn it, because you need to recover your investment.”

Experts say the resulting smoke risks causing a spike in respirator­y emergencie­s in a region already hit hard by Covid-19.

 ?? AFP ?? A photo shows burnt trees in the Amazon rainforest in Rondonia state, Brazil, last year. Brazil’s national space agency, INPE, identified 6,803 fires in the Amazon region in July 2020, up from 5,318 the year before.
AFP A photo shows burnt trees in the Amazon rainforest in Rondonia state, Brazil, last year. Brazil’s national space agency, INPE, identified 6,803 fires in the Amazon region in July 2020, up from 5,318 the year before.

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