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Monday, January 21, 2008

Destruction of Amazon forest accelerates

The destruction of the Amazon rainforest has surged in the past four months, raising the prospect of 2008 being a disastrous year for the world's most important eco-system, a senior Brazilian government scientist has warned.

Dr Carlos Nobre, a scientist with a government agency that monitors the Amazon, said thousands of square kilometres of rainforest had been destroyed since October, after four years in which deforestation rates had begun to slow.

"I think the past four months is a big concern for the government and now they are sending people to do more law enforcement," Dr Nobre told a seminar in Washington yesterday. "But I can tell you that [deforestation] is going to be much higher than 2007."

5 957 square kilometres of forest lost in the past four months

The claims from the head of Brazil's National Institute for Space Research come in the same week as a major report was released detailing the growth of cattle ranching in the Amazon.

Dr Nobre said 5 957 square kilometres of forest had been lost in the past four months. That compares with an estimated 9 582 square kilometres in the 12 months that ended on July 31, which Brazilian officials hailed as the lowest deforestation rate since the 1970s.

These figures had already been hotly disputed by conservationists who point to increasing pressure from sugar-cane plantations to feed the ethanol boom, illegal cattle ranching for beef exports, soybean production and illegal logging operations. "All those drivers of change are there," said Dr Nobre. "The three years of reduced deforestation did not bring by themselves a cure for illegal deforestation."

Roberto Smeraldi, from Friends of the Earth Brazil, said the surge was part of the same cycle of destruction that has seen so much of the forest cleared in the past. "We had a real overdose of deforestation between 2002 and 2005, which led to abundant availability of cleared land," he said. "Now this land has been occupied, the process heats up again."

Friends of the Earth released a report this week which revealed that 74 million cattle are reared in the Amazon basin where they outnumber people by a ratio of more than three to one.

Deforestation has emerged as the second leading source of the carbon emissions driving climate change. Brazil is now among the four main carbon polluters in the world and deforestation accounts for more than three-quarters of its emissions.

Despite its acknowledged role as one the largest carbon sinks on the planet, its unrivalled biodiversity and the fact that it stores half the world's fresh water, one fifth of the Amazon basin has been destroyed in recent years. There are serious concerns that the very survival of the world's largest rainforest is threatened and, last month, the WWF published research suggesting the Amazon could be wiped out by 2030.

A record drought two years ago reduced the Amazon River to less than a trickle along large stretches and fires last year, caused in part by forest-clearing for ranches, scattered tons of ash over Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay.

Now in his second term, Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has made a series of commitments to safeguarding the Amazon. Marina da Silva, his environment minister, has been feted for her stance on conservation.

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=143&art_id=vn20080120083450882C882428

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