Skip to main content

Brazil’s new president plans to plunder the Amazon, which is bad news for all of us

[ad_1]


On Sunday, Brazil elected a new president: Jair Bolsonaro. Bolsonaro has been compared to President Donald Trump for his far-right politics. Like Trump, his election is a sign of dissatisfaction with the status quo in Brazil, but also like Trump, his actions on matters like the environment will have consequences that reach around the globe. In this, he might beat the United States president, because he now governs an incomparable resource—the Amazon.



“There’s really nothing that Bolsonaro is putting on the table that makes conservationists and scientists happy right now,” says noted conservation biologist William Laurance of James Cook University in Australia.



Among his many controversial statements, Bolsonaro vows to open up indigenous lands to resource exploitation, ban environmental NGOs like the World Wildlife Fund, place Brazil’s environmental ministry under the control of its ministry of agriculture, and relax laws safeguarding the Amazon from development. Earlier in the election cycle, he threatened to back out of the Paris climate accords, a stance he has now relaxed. But remaining part of the accords won’t mean much if all of his election promises come to pass.



Of course, election promises are one thing and in-office action is another. The issues surrounding the Amazon are important far outside Brazil, though, and they’re connected.



When it comes to the environment—and specifically, the Amazon—the world is watching Bolsonaro closely. “This is one political entity, the federal government of Brazil, that has control over 70 percent of the Amazon,” says Emilio Bruna, a University of Florida ecologist who studies the Amazon. What Brazil decides to do with that territory has global implications.



Brazil is home to about 70 percent of the Amazon rainforest, one of the planet’s greatest sinks of biodiversity and a key carbon storage site. Protecting it is essential if we want to mitigate the effects of climate change and the associated mass extinction currently taking place. Rates of deforestation fell to historic lows in 2012, but they’ve been rising since. With a government that’s open to resource exploitation and actively hostile to conservation, we can expect that to continue.



A sign of the times is the fact that Bolsonaro plans to dismantle the governmental ministry of the environment and place it under the purview of the ministry of agriculture, Bruna says. “Obviously, [these two ministries] have different teams and goals, and in fact, the ministry of the environment is also responsible for enforcement of environmental legislation,” he says. That includes things like policing farmers to make sure they’re not illegally deforesting to use the land to grow soybeans or herd cattle. “By sinking the ministry for the environment into the ministry for agriculture, it really tells you about what their priorities are,” he says.



But merely considering deforestation in terms of its climate impacts leaves out some of the most important players in Brazilian politics, people for whom the Amazon isn’t just a jewel of the planet—it’s home.



"This scenario is totally heartbreaking,” Dinamã Tuxá, Coordinator of Brazil’s Association of Indigenous Peoples (APIB) says in a press release from the organization Amazon Watch. “Bolsonaro has made clear and consistent declarations about ending the titling of indigenous lands, which are completely opposed to our rights.”



Bolsanaro has described the Amazon as “like a child with chickenpox,” comparing indigenous reservations with diseased lesions. Ending indigenous titling and opening up indigenous lands for mining were among his campaign promises. He’s also talked about expanding nuclear and hydroelectric power in the Amazon—which means more dams, some of which will displace indigenous peoples.



The indigenous peoples of the Amazon play a vital role in protecting the rainforest and tracking the progress of illegal deforestation. But beyond their utility in protecting the region, it is their home. Removing protections that safeguard the Amazon also endangers their most basic rights.



An APIB release published on October 22 asks the national and international human rights community “to stay alert, aiming for the protection of our lives as well as the rights guaranteed both by the federal constitution and international treaties signed by Brazil."



Indigenous reserves have “really crucially augmented traditional protected areas” in the Amazon, says Laurance. Together with those protected areas and government-controlled logging sites, which are environmentally managed, they create conservation corridors wending their way through crucial parts of the jungle, he says. Taking away power from indigenous reserves—many of which are not fully defined, leaving them politically vulnerable—would fragment these corridors and leave only patches, which are far less effective for preserving wildlife.



“A lot of the indigenous reserves in the Amazon are smack in the path of a lot of development pressure,” he says. Take a pro-development president who explicitly threatens indigenous self-governance, and who knows what could happen.




[ad_2]

Written By Kat Eschner

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ice technicians are the secret stars of the Winter Olympics

[ad_1] The emphasis of this year's two-week-long Winter Olympic Games has been placed squarely on the Olympians themselves. After all, the stated purpose of the international competition is to bring together the world’s greatest athletes in a nail-biting competition across fifteen different winter sports. But before the curlers, skiers, and skaters even arrived in Pyeongchang, South Korea, the Olympians of the ice technician world were already a few weeks deep in a competition of their own. Mark Callan of the World Curling Federation and Markus Aschauer of the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation both say they’re hoping to make the best ice the Winter Olympics have ever seen. To transform the barren concrete jungle of existing tracks and arenas into an ice- and snow-covered wonderland is an enormous undertaking. And it takes a keen understanding of the physics and chemistry that keeps frozen precipitation pristine. Curling Callan has been making and maintaining ice for m

In the wake of NYC terrorist attack, Trump says he's ordered increased 'Extreme Vetting'

[ad_1] President Donald Trump has requested for a heightened vetting program following Tuesday's terrorist attack in New York. @realDonaldTrump: I have just ordered Homeland Security to step up our already Extreme Vetting Program. Being politically correct is fine, but not for this! Earlier, he tweeted that the attack in lower Manhattan was committed by a "sick and deranged person." @realDonaldTrump: In NYC, looks like another attack by a very sick and deranged person. Law enforcement is following this closely. NOT IN THE U.S.A.! His remarks came after a motorist drove onto a busy bicycle path near the World Trade Center memorial and struck several people on Tuesday, leaving at least eight people dead and a dozen injured. NBC News repor

How to save everything you post to social media

[ad_1] If you get the urge to revisit that cute photo you posted some time last year, you'll have to scroll through your timeline for what feels like hours to track it back down. Instead, when you share a post on social media, also save it to your phone for safe-keeping. This will not only save your social media hits for posterity, but also make them easier to find if you ever need to rediscover them. In this guide, we focus on saving photos and videos, because text posts are slightly more complicated—the only way to really preserve text from Facebook and Twitter is to download your entire archive (we'll explain how to do this below), and Instagram and Snapchat don't let you save or export your instant messages at all. When it comes to photos and videos, there's a shortcut to make sure they stay on your phone: Originally film them through a dedicated app, which will save them to a gallery. Only then should you open up a social media app to share them. However, there'