Daily Southtown

Record deforestat­ion upticks raise alarm in Brazil Amazon

- By Fabiano Maisonnave

RIO DE JANEIRO — Deforestat­ion detected in the Brazilian Amazon broke all records for April, and that followed similar records set in January and February, reflecting a worrisome uptick in destructio­n in a state deep within the rainforest.

Satellite alerts of deforestat­ion for April correspond­ed to nearly 400 square miles, the highest figure for that month in seven years of record-keeping and 74% more than the same month in 2021, which was the prior record.

It marked the first time that deforestat­ion alerts have surpassed 385 square miles during a month in the rainy season, which runs from December to April.

“The April number is very scary. Due to the rain, it is traditiona­lly a month with less deforestat­ion,” said Suely Araujo, senior public policy specialist at the Climate Observator­y, a network of environmen­tal groups.

The data come from the Brazilian space agency’s Deter monitoring system and correspond to the first 29 days of April. Full-month figures will be available next week.

Deter data previously showed 267 square miles of deforestat­ion this January, more than quadruple the level in the same month last year. In February, it reached 123 square miles, up 62% from 2021.

The Amazon is the world’s largest tropical rainforest and an enormous carbon sink. There is widespread concern that its destructio­n will not only release massive amounts of carbon into the atmosphere, further complicati­ng hopes of arresting climate change, but also push it past a tipping point after which much of the forest will begin an irreversib­le process of degradatio­n into tropical savannah.

Amazonas state led deforestat­ion in April, overtaking the states of both Para and Mato Grosso for only the second time on record. That is particular­ly worrisome, as Amazonas is deep in the rainforest and has remained pristine relative to the so-called arc of deforestat­ion along areas used for agricultur­e and cattle-raising .

“Amazonas is still a very preserved state. If deforestat­ion explodes there, we will lose control of a region that is outside the traditiona­l deforestat­ion region,” Araujo, a former president of Brazil’s environmen­t regulator, said by phone.

Amazonas’ destructio­n has been concentrat­ed in the southern part of the state, where President Jair Bolsonaro has promised to pave a 250-mile dirt stretch of the BR-319 highway that connects the cities of Manaus and Porto Velho.

Anticipati­on of the paving has generated real estate speculatio­n alongside the highway; land grabbers engage in largescale deforestat­ion with the expectatio­n that the areas will become legal for agricultur­e or cattle-raising in the future.

A study released last week by the BR-319 Observator­y, a network of environmen­tal nonprofits, revealed a morethan-1,800-mile network of secondary roads in reach of the highway.

The roads are used primarily to get to areas desired by land grabbers and loggers.

 ?? LEO CORREA/AP 2019 ?? An Indigenous chief stands before a path created by loggers on the border near a biological reserve and Menkragnot­ire lands in Altamira, Brazil.
LEO CORREA/AP 2019 An Indigenous chief stands before a path created by loggers on the border near a biological reserve and Menkragnot­ire lands in Altamira, Brazil.

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