Brazil wildfires: Fires spike in Amazon, scientists say

Brazil wildfires: Fires spike in Amazon, scientists say

BRASILIA, Oct 3 (NNN-AGENCIES) — The number of forest fires in
Brazil’s Amazon increased sharply in September fueling growing criticism of President Jair Bolsonaro’s environmental policies.

The National Institute of Space Research (INPE) said satellite imagery
showed an increase of 61 percent in the number of fires in September,
compared to the same period last year.

Satellites used by the institute detected 32,017 outbreaks last month in
the Amazon, compared to 19,925 in the same month in 2019.

In the first nine months of the year, the total number of fires increased
by 14 percent over the same period in 2019, the INPE said.

Despite the data from INPE, a world-renowned public body, Bolsonaro has
continued to denounce a campaign of “disinformation” about the Pantanal and the Amazon.

On Wednesday, Bolsonaro lashed
out at US Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden for “disastrous and
unnecessary” comments on destruction of the rainforest.

Biden said during the first presidential debate that if elected in
November, he would raise $20 billion to help Brazil to “stop tearing down”
the Amazon, threatening “significant economic consequences” if it did not.

Later, in a video address to a UN biodiversity summit, Bolsonaro said
Brazil was “firm in its commitment to sustainable development and preserving our environmental wealth.”

He accused “certain non-governmental organizations” of perpetrating
“environmental crimes” to stain the country’s image.

Most of the Amazon fires consist of agricultural burning on illegally
deforested areas, even though the government banned all burning for four
months from July.

Further south, in the Pantanal — the world’s largest wetlands — the
number of fires have almost tripled to 8,106, making September 2020 the worst month since the INPE began compiling statistics on the fires in 1998.

“Brazil is in flames. From the Amazon to the Pantanal, the environmental
heritage of all Brazilians is being reduced to ashes,” Christiane Mazzetti of
Greenpeace in a statement.

“The is a consequence of the policy of the Bolsonaro government, which
despite the predictions of drought in the Pantanal, has not used the
necessary means of fire protection,” she said.

The situation in the Pantanal, straddling Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia, has
been exacerbated by the worst drought in half a century.

The fires have ravaged 23 percent of the Brazilian part of the Pantanal,
according to data collected by scientists at the Laboratory for the
Application of Environmental Satellites (LASA).

The wildfires that devastated the rainforest last year triggered an
international outcry, forcing Bolsonaro onto the defensive. He ultimately
deployed the army to the Amazon to fight the fires.

So far this year, despite an increase in fires, the deforestation rate is
down by about five percent.

But Brazil is coming under increasing pressure from allies, trading
partners, international investors and powerful voices in the business world
over the scale of the deforestation.

In June, 29 global investment firms managing nearly $4 trillion in assets
sent an open letter to Bolsonaro, urging him to change policies blamed for
accelerating the destruction of the rainforest.

Environmental destruction by Brazilian agribusiness firms is also
threatening a long-sought trade deal between the European Union and the
Mercosur bloc, of which Brazil is a member. — NNN-AGENCIES

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