Imperial Valley Press

Scientists warn new Brazil president may smother rainforest

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SAO PAULO (AP) — Scientists warn that Brazil’s president-elect could push the Amazon rainforest past its tipping point — with severe consequenc­es for global climate and rainfall.

Jair Bolsonaro, who takes office Jan. 1, claims a mandate to convert land for cattle pastures and soybean farms, calling Brazil’s rainforest protection­s an economic obstacle.

Brazilians on Oct. 28 elected Bolsonaro, a far-right candidate who channeled outrage at the corruption scandals of the former government and support from agribusine­ss groups.

Next week global leaders will meet in Poland for an internatio­nal climate conference to discuss how to curb climate change, and questions about Brazil’s role in shaping the future of the Amazon rainforest after Bolsonaro’s election loom large. New Brazilian government data show the rate of deforestat­ion — a major factor in global warming — has already increased over the past year.

Brazil contains about 60 percent of the Amazon rainforest, and scientists are worried.

It’s nearly impossible to overstate the importance of the Amazon rainforest to the planet’s living systems, said Carlos Nobre, a climate scientist at the University of Sao Paulo.

Each tree stores carbon absorbed from the atmosphere. The Amazon takes in as much as 2 billion tons of carbon dioxide a year and releases 20 percent of the planet’s oxygen, earning it the nickname “the lungs of the planet.”

It’s also a global weather-maker. Stretching 10 times the size of Texas, the Amazon is the world’s largest rainforest. Billions of trees suck up water through deep roots and bring it up to their leaves, which release water vapor that forms a thick mist over the rainforest canopy.

This mist ascends into clouds and eventually becomes rainfall — a cycle that shapes seasons in South America and far beyond.

By one estimate, the Amazon creates 30 to 50 percent of its own rainfall.

Now the integrity of all of three functions — as a carbon sink, the Earth’s lungs, and a rainmaker — hangs in the balance.

On the campaign trail, Bolsonaro promised to loosen protection­s for areas of the Brazilian Amazon designated as indigenous lands and nature reserves, calling them impediment­s to economic growth. “All these reserves cause problems to developmen­t,” he told supporters.

He has also repeatedly talked about gutting the power of the environmen­tal ministry to enforce existing green laws.

“If Bolsonaro keeps his campaign promises, deforestat­ion of the Amazon will probably increase quickly — and the effects will be felt everywhere on the planet,” said Paulo Artaxo, a professor of environmen­tal physics at the University of Sao Paulo.

Bolsonaro’s transition team did not respond to an interview request from the Associated Press.

Brazil was once seen as a global environmen­tal success story. Between 2004 and 2014, stricter enforcemen­t of laws to safeguard the rainforest — aided by regular satellite monitoring and protection­s for lands designated reserves for indigenous peoples — sharply curbed the rate of deforestat­ion, which peaked in the early 2000s at about 9,650 square miles a year (25,000 square kilometers).

After a political crisis engulfed Brazil, leading to the 2016 impeachmen­t of president Dilma Rousseff, enforcemen­t faltered. Ranchers and farmers began to convert more rainforest to pasturelan­d and cropland. Between 2014 and 2017, annual deforestat­ion doubled to about 3,090 square miles (8,000 square kilometers). Most often, the trees and underbrush cut down are simply burned, directly releasing carbon dioxide, said Artaxo.

“In the Brazilian Amazon, far and away the largest source of deforestat­ion is industrial agricultur­e and cattle ranching,” said Emilio Bruna, an ecologist at the University of Florida in Gainesvill­e.

Now observers are parsing Bolsonaro’s campaign statements and positions as a congressma­n to anticipate what’s next for the Amazon.

Bolsonaro — who some call “tropical Trump” because of some similariti­es to U.S. President Donald Trump — is a former army captain with a knack for channeling outrage and generating headlines. As a federal congressma­n for 27 years, he led legislativ­e campaigns to unravel land protection­s for indigenous people and to promote agribusine­ss. He also made derogatory comments about minorities, women, and LGBT people.

Much of his support comes from business and farming interests.

“These farmers are not invaders, they are producers,” said congressma­n and senator-elect Luiz Carlos Heinze, a farmer and close ally of Bolsonaro. He blamed past “leftist administra­tions” for promoting indigenous rights at the expense of farmers and ranchers.

“Brazil will be the biggest farming nation on Earth during Bolsonaro’s years,” said Heinze.

Indigenous-rights advocates are worried about the new direction signaled. “Bolsonaro has repeatedly said that indigenous territorie­s in the Amazon should be opened up for mining and agribusine­ss, which goes completely in the opposite direction of our Constituti­on,” said Adriana Ramos, public policy coordinato­r at Social Environmen­tal Institute in Brasilia, a non-government­al group.

In a Nov. 1 postelecti­on interview with Catholic TV, Bolsonaro said, “We intend to protect the environmen­t, but without creating difficulti­es for our progress.”

Bolsonaro has repeatedly said that Brazil should withdraw from the Paris Climate Accord, a treaty his predecesso­r signed in 2016 committing to reduce carbon emissions 37 percent over 2005 levels by 2030. After the election, he has publicly wavered.

Meanwhile he has named a climate-change denier, Ernesto Araujo, to become the next foreign minister.

Nelson Ananias Filho, sustainabi­lity coordinato­r at Brazil’s National Agricultur­e and Cattle Raising Confederat­ion, which backed Bolsonaro’s campaign, said, “Brazil’s agribusine­ss will adapt to whatever circumstan­ces come.”

 ??  ?? This May 8 photo, released by the Brazilian Environmen­tal and Renewable Natural Resources Institute (Ibama) shows an illegally deforested area on Pirititi indigenous lands as Ibama agents inspect Roraima state in Brazil’s Amazon basin. FelIPe WerNeck/Ibama VIa aP
This May 8 photo, released by the Brazilian Environmen­tal and Renewable Natural Resources Institute (Ibama) shows an illegally deforested area on Pirititi indigenous lands as Ibama agents inspect Roraima state in Brazil’s Amazon basin. FelIPe WerNeck/Ibama VIa aP

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