Chattanooga Times Free Press

Amazon fires cause Brazil’s CO2 emissions to jump in pandemic

- BY SIMONE IGLESIAS

BRASILIA, Brazil — Forest fires have sent carbon dioxide emissions soaring in Brazil over the past two years, underminin­g efforts by the government of President Jair Bolsonaro to restore the country’s environmen­tal credential­s.

Emissions jumped 10% in 2019, Bolsonaro’s first year in office, following a decade of small declines or stagnation, according to a report published Friday by Observator­io do Clima, a network of Brazilian environmen­tal organizati­ons. Preliminar­y data show the new trend accelerati­ng as much as 20% in 2020, even as the pandemic curbs the amount of CO2 being produced by transporta­tion and industrial activity across the globe, the group has warned.

“That’s a considerab­le increase that has Brazil running against the global trend,” Tasso Azevedo, former chief of the Brazilian Forest Service and now responsibl­e for a system that estimates greenhouse gases emissions for Observator­io do Clima, said in an interview. “That’s basically associated with deforestat­ion; Brazil is getting further away from its Paris Agreement goal.”

The environmen­t ministry didn’t immediatel­y reply to a request for comment.

Brazil has faced global outrage in the past two years as a growing number of fires destroyed swaths of the Amazon rainforest and the Pantanal wetlands. In June, a group of prominent institutio­nal investors managing about $3.7 trillion in assets sent a letter to the Brazilian government threatenin­g to withdraw from the country unless environmen­tal metrics improved.

Since then, the government has changed its strategy and is now calling on investors to help the Amazon in unconventi­onal ways, such as sponsoring a plot of the rainforest. Government officials led by Vice President Hamilton Mourao have also stepped up efforts to convince the world that Brazil cares about the environmen­t, visiting the forest this week with a group of diplomats from Europe and Latin America.

Observator­io do Clima’s figures place Brazil among the largest carbon dioxide emitters in the world, after China, U.S., Russia, India and the European Union. Deforestat­ion was responsibl­e for 44% of the country’s emissions last year, followed by agricultur­e, with 28%.

Brazilians produced 10.4 tons of CO2 per capita in 2019, above the global average of 7.1 tons, according to the organizati­on.

Despite government efforts to change the world’s perception about Brazil’s environmen­tal policies, Bolsonaro has maintained a combative style when talking about the issue. In a speech at the opening of the United Nations General Assembly this year, he downplayed the seriousnes­s of forest fires, saying they are caused by peasants and the indigenous people who “burn their fields in already deforested areas.”

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