Antelope Valley Press

Colombian president pledges to protect rainforest

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RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Gustavo Petro, Colombia’s first elected leftist president, will take office, in August, with ambitious proposals to halt the record-high rates of deforestat­ion in the Amazon rainforest. Petro has promised to limit agribusine­ss expansion into the forest, and create reserves where Indigenous communitie­s and others are allowed to harvest rubber, acai and other non-timber forest products. He has also pledged income from carbon credits to finance replanting.

“From Colombia, we will give humanity a reward, a remedy, a solution: not to burn the Amazon rainforest anymore, to recover it to its natural frontier, to give humanity the possibilit­y of life on this planet,” Petro, wearing an Indigenous headdress, said to a crowd in the Amazon city of Leticia during his campaign.

But to do that he first needs to establish reign over large, lawless areas.

The task of stopping deforestat­ion seems more challengin­g than ever. In 2021, the Colombian Amazon lost more than 240,000 acres of pristine forest to deforestat­ion and another 22,000 acres to fire. Both were down from what they had been, in 2020, but 2021 was still the fourth worst year on record according to Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project (MAAP), an initiative of the nonprofit Amazon Conservati­on Associatio­n.

More than 40% of Colombia is in the Amazon, an area roughly the size of Spain. The country has the world’s largest bird biodiversi­ty, mainly because it includes transition zones between the Andes mountains and the Amazon lowlands. Fifteen percent of the Colombian Amazon has already been deforested, according to Foundation for Conservati­on and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, or FCDS.

Destructio­n of the forest has been on the rise, since 2016, the year Colombia signed a peace accord with the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, that ended decades of a bloody armed conflict.

“The peace process allowed people to return to formerly conflict-ridden rural areas. As the returning population increasing­ly used the natural resources, it contribute­d to deforestat­ion and increases in forest fires, especially in the Amazon and the Andes-Amazon transition regions,” according to a new paper in the journal “Environmen­tal Science and Policy.”

The presence of the State is barely felt in Colombia’s Amazon. “Once the armed groups were demobilize­d, they left the forest free for cattle ranching, illegal mining and drug traffickin­g,” said Ruth Consuelo Chaparro, director of the Roads to Identity Foundation, in a telephone interview. “The State has not filled the gaps.”

The main driver of deforestat­ion has been the expansion of cattle ranching. Since 2016, the number of cattle in the Amazon has doubled to 2.2 million. In the same period, about 1.2 million acres of forest were lost, according to FCDS, based on official data.

 ?? FABIANO MAISONNAVE/AP PHOTO Leticia, in Colombia’s ?? A painter draws a snake in the commercial area of Amazon, on June 15.
FABIANO MAISONNAVE/AP PHOTO Leticia, in Colombia’s A painter draws a snake in the commercial area of Amazon, on June 15.

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