The Guardian (USA)

Dramatic footage fuels fears Amazon fires could be worse than last year

- Dom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Dramatic new images have shown fires raging over wide areas of the Brazilian Amazon nearly a year after blazes across the region sparked an internatio­nal crisis for the far-right government of President Jair Bolsonaro.

The video images and photograph­s were filmed during a flight by Greenpeace over a wide area of forest in Mato Grosso state in the south of the Amazon on 9 July. Filmed just as the Amazon dry season was beginning, they raise fears that this year’s fires could be as devastatin­g and perhaps worse than 2019’s.

“It was shocking to see the size of this deforestat­ion and fires, at a time when the government is dismantlin­g environmen­t protection,” said Rômulo Batista, senior Amazon campaigner for Greenpeace, who spent days flying over a wide area. “It is the beginning of the dry season and we saw fires and areas being prepared for deforestat­ion.”

Some images showed hotspots in areas near the towns of Nova Canaã do Norte, Porto dos Gaúchos, Itanhangá and Nova Maringá as well as areas recently converted to pasture – the biggest cause of deforestat­ion in the Amazon. Other photos showed felled trees piled up for burning and fires raging near Juara, known as the cattle capital.

Farmers traditiona­lly burn cleared areas in the Amazon during the dry season. The number of fires last year was the highest since 2010.

“They fell the forest and let it dry under the sun. When it is dry they put it all together and set it on fire,” said Batista. The land is then turned over to cattle farming or agricultur­e. But Batista also saw signs that fire was being used to clear forest once valuable woods had been removed. Images show fires in intact forest near Alta Floresta. “We are seeing fire being used to deforest more and more,” said Batista.

Bolsonaro’s government, meanwhile, has dismantled environmen­tal protection agencies - sacking key officials, and reducing the amount of fines levied for environmen­tal crimes by environmen­t agency IBAMA last year to the lowest level in 24 years, the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper reported. Last year he sacked the head of Brazil’s space research institute after calling official figures showing rising deforestat­ion “lies”.

However, he has promised to tackle the fires. On Thursday, Bolsonaro banned agricultur­al and forest fires for 120 days. His vice-president, Hamilton Mourão, is in charge of the country’s Amazon council and an army operation called Green Brazil launched on 11 May, which for the second year running is targeting illegal deforestat­ion and fires.

“We started combating these fires early and we are sure we will reduce this illicit activity by the second semester of the year,” Mourão told the Brazilian senate on Tuesday. The north of Mato Grosso state was one of four areas suffering high deforestat­ion, he said, along with Pará and Rondônia states and the south of Amazonas state. Mourão’s office did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on the Greenpeace revelation­s.

But official data shows the Brazilian government’s efforts so far this year have failed to bring results. Brazil saw more fires in the Amazon this June than in any year since 2007. Brazil’s space research agency INPE spotted 2,248, compared with 1,880 in June last year. Preliminar­y data showed deforestat­ion from January to June, at 3,069 sq km, was 25% up on the same period last year.

The Brazilian government is coming under increasing pressure from internatio­nal investors and Brazilian companies.

On 23 June, internatio­nal investors managing trillions of dollars in assets warned Brazil about escalating deforestat­ion and the “dismantlin­g” of policies to protect the environmen­t and indigenous communitie­s. On 7 July, CEOs of 39 companies including Microsoft, Ambev, Shell and leading banks like Santander expressed concerns over “the impact on business of the current negative perception Brazil has abroad in relation to socio-environmen­tal issues in the Amazon”.

But Mourão has said that to control deforestat­ion Brazil needs to regulate chaotic land ownership in the Amazon. The government plans a decree to allow 97,000 land titles to be regularise­d remotely which environmen­talists say means rewarding land grabbers with legal titles.

In May, more than 40 British companies including leading supermarke­ts wrote to Brazilian lawmakers to express their concerns over fires and deforestat­ion – and an earlier version of the same decree. Greenpeace said that British consumers need to show they do not agree with Amazon destructio­n.

“Those supermarke­ts will be judged on how they respond to this unfolding crisis. They all sell high volumes of industrial meat, much of which is connected to deforestat­ion in forests like the Amazon,” said Anna Jones, head of forests at Greenpeace UK. “It’s time supermarke­ts dropped forest destroyers and replaced industrial meat with plant-based options.”

While Mourão has reached for a more moderate tone, Bolsonaro has doubled down on the same fiery rhetoric that last year saw him accuse the actor Leonardo DiCaprio of paying for fires without providing any evidence, and fall out publicly with France’s president, Emmanuel Macron. During Thursday night’s weekly Facebook Live, he said attacks on Brazil’s crumbling Amazon protection were motivated by commercial rivalry.

“Brazil is an agribusine­ss power and Europe is an environmen­tal sect. They don’t preserve anything,” he said, “and they shoot at us the whole time unfairly. Why? It’s a commercial battle.”

 ?? Photograph: Christian Braga/Greenpeace ?? Greenpeace captured photos and videos of fires during a flight over Mato Grosso state.
Photograph: Christian Braga/Greenpeace Greenpeace captured photos and videos of fires during a flight over Mato Grosso state.
 ?? Photograph: Christian Braga/Greenpeace ?? Forest remainders burning in Juara, Mato Grosso. Deforested area is mostly turned over to cattle farming or agricultur­e.
Photograph: Christian Braga/Greenpeace Forest remainders burning in Juara, Mato Grosso. Deforested area is mostly turned over to cattle farming or agricultur­e.

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