Deforestation in Brazil’s Amazon rises for first time in 4 months
Brazilians are clearing the Amazon faster amid Jair Bolsonaro’s weakened environmental enforcement.
Deforestation in Brazil’s Amazon increased in October for the first time in four months, government data showed on Friday, as the destruction of the world’s largest rainforest remains high under right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro.
In October, deforestation rose 50 percent from the previous year to 836 square kilometres (323 square miles), according to preliminary data from government space research agency INPE.
But monthly deforestation eased from its peak from July to September as the rainy season began, making logging difficult. Forest clearances are down 6 percent in the first 10 months of 2020, compared with the same period a year ago, to 7,899 square kilometres (3,050 square miles), INPE found. That is roughly 10 times the size of New York City.
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Brazil is expected to release its official measure of 2020 deforestation by year’s end, which is usually far higher than the preliminary figures. That measure, called PRODES, compares satellite images at the end of July 2020 to those taken at the beginning of August 2019 to detect forest clearances. There are fewer clouds in that period to obscure deforestation.
Researchers at the non-government Amazon Environmental Research Institute (IPAM) say that PRODES is predicted to show a dramatic increase to more than 14,000 square kilometres (5,405 square miles) deforested for 2020 compared with 10,129 square kilometres (3,911 square miles) for 2019. That would likely be the highest deforestation since 2006.
Continuing high destruction could draw the scrutiny of US President-elect Joe Biden, who repeatedly mentioned late in his campaign the need to protect the Amazon.
In the first presidential debate, Biden said that the world should collectively offer Brazil $20bn to stop Amazon deforestation and threatened unspecified economic consequences if the country did not.