The Manila Times

Amazon deforestat­ion rate highest in 2020

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RIO DE JANEIRO: Deforestat­ion in the Amazon rainforest in Brazil more than doubled in January compared with the previous year, according to official data published Friday (Saturday in Manila).

More than 280 square kilometers were cleared, an increase of 108 percent. It was the largest area cleared in the month of January since 2015, when such data started being collected, according to Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE).

The data was collected by the INPE’s satellite- based DETER system, which monitors deforestat­ion in real time.

In comparison, 136 square kilometers were cleared in January 2019, 183 square kilometers in 2018 and 58 square kilometers in 2017.

INPE data published in mid-January found that deforestat­ion in the Amazon in northern Brazil had soared 85 percent in 2019, clearing 9,166 km2 — the highest number in at least five years — versus 4,946 km2 cleared in 2018.

The sharp increase overlapped the first year in office of President Jair Bolsonaro, a climate change skeptic who has eased restrictio­ns on exploiting the Amazon’s vast riches.

Bolsonaro made headlines in August when he attempted to minimize the resurgence of forest fires that had shocked the world.

On August 2, INPE then-president Ricardo Galvao was sacked by Bolsonaro’s administra­tion, which accused him of exaggerati­ng the extent of the deforestat­ion.

On Wednesday, Bolsonaro unveiled a sweeping plan for the Amazon rainforest that would open indigenous lands to mining, farming and hydroelect­ric power projects. Many nongovernm­ent organizati­on said this would further increase deforestat­ion.

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