World

94% of Brazil deforestation illegal, report reveals

Researchers say Jair Bolsonaro’s promise to eliminate issue looks doubtful, given lack of transparency on authorised land use

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 18 May 2021 2:30PM

94% of Brazil deforestation illegal, report reveals
In the 12 months to August 2020, deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon went up 9.5%, destroying an area bigger than Jamaica, according to government data. – AFP pic, May 18, 2021

RIO DE JANEIRO – The vast majority of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon is illegal and President Jair Bolsonaro’s promise to eliminate it looks doubtful, given a lack of transparency on authorised land use, said researchers yesterday.

Under pressure to curb the destruction of the Amazon, Bolsonaro vowed last month at a world climate summit to eliminate illegal deforestation by 2030.

But almost no deforestation can be considered fully legal in Brazil, given that authorities are failing to adequately implement laws on tracking how much and where land is being cleared under permit, said the report, published by a group of university researchers and experts from environmental organisations including the World Wildlife Fund Brazil and Centro da Vida Institute.

The report found that 94% of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon and surrounding Matopiba region is illegal.

That is partly because even in cases where farmers, ranchers, loggers and others have permits to clear land, authorities are unable to document how those permits are being used on the ground, it said.

“The differentiation between legal and illegal deforestation is a key factor to ensure that Brazil’s agricultural and forestry production is not contaminated by environmental crimes.”

Bolsonaro has presided over a surge in deforestation in the world’s biggest rainforest since taking office in 2019.

In the 12 months to August 2020, deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon increased 9.5%, destroying an area bigger than Jamaica, according to government data.

The far-right leader faces international pressure to clean up his government’s environmental image – and backlash from businesses worried about how that image will impact the world’s No. 1 beef and soy exporter.

“Bolsonaro made that promise of ‘zero deforestation’, but how will we even know if the necessary information isn’t available?” Paula Bernasconi, coordinator of the Centro da Vida Institute, told AFP.

“We urgently need more technical effort and political will to implement Brazilian environmental and transparency laws,” said co-author Raoni Rajao of the Federal University of Minas Gerais.

“Otherwise, the lack of transparency will continue serving as a shield for the ongoing destruction of our ecosystems.” – AFP, May 18, 2021

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