Amazon rainforest in danger as Bolsonaro government uses Covid as cover to 'run the cattle herd' – Dr Richard Dixon

With the media pre-occupied by the coronavirus outbreak, Brazil’s far-right government sees an opportunity to trash the Amazon rainforest, writes Dr Richard Dixon.
A fire burns in a section of the Amazon rainforest in the Candeias do Jamari region near Porto Velho in August last year (Picture: Victor Moriyama/Getty Images)A fire burns in a section of the Amazon rainforest in the Candeias do Jamari region near Porto Velho in August last year (Picture: Victor Moriyama/Getty Images)
A fire burns in a section of the Amazon rainforest in the Candeias do Jamari region near Porto Velho in August last year (Picture: Victor Moriyama/Getty Images)

The Amazon rainforest is home to an amazing diversity of wildlife, more than 300 tribes of indigenous people and absorbs around five per cent of the excess carbon emissions we humans put into the atmosphere every year.

I wrote in this column last year about the devastating fires in the Amazon and the complicity in setting them of the Brazilian government and its friends in cattle ranching and soya plantations. Covid-19 has not just made the problems of deforestation worse, it has given the government new opportunities to behave even more badly.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Brazil’s Environment Minister, Ricardo Salles, was caught on a video of a Cabinet meeting saying that the distraction of the Covid-19 pandemic gave the government the opportunity to “run the cattle herd” through the Amazon by weakening environmental rules and standards. This includes a new proposed law to give land titles to farmers illegally occupying indigenous people’s land.

Read More
Amazon ecosystem 'could collapse’ in less than 50 years, scientists warn

He specifically pointed out that the press are only talking about the pandemic at the moment, saying the government should act in this “moment of calm”. Just a few days ago, Brazil overtook Italy to become the country with the third-highest death toll from the virus in the world. It is quite breathtaking cynicism from Salles to think this is a good time to metaphorically bury bad news as Brazil is literally burying more than a thousand Covid victims a day. Some in the UK Government are clearly thinking the same about the looming no-deal Brexit.

Last year 99 per cent of all deforestation in Brazil was illegal, destroying 12,000 square kilometres of natural forest, most of it in the Amazon, a major increase on previous years. Far-right President Jair Bolsonaro was elected on a promise to “develop the rainforest” and he was happy to let last year’s fires burn, until international pressure forced him to send in the army to make some attempt at controlling the flames.

The pressures on people and wildlife in the Amazon are from the expansion of soya farming and livestock, illegal logging, mining and roads and ports projects to transport the goods produced. A favourite tactic to clear the way for plantations and mines is to set fires, with the government trying to blame small farmers and even environmental groups. Our sister organisation in Brazil works with local communities and indigenous people to help fight the destruction of the Amazon rainforest, and the political onslaught which is making that destruction ever easier.

Cases of Covid-19 are increasing rapidly among the area’s indigenous people, despite some tribes trying to cut off all contact with the outside world. The Bolsonaro government’s attitude has emboldened those who are trying to grab yet more land, with killings of indigenous people and community leaders on the rise. Land grabbers, miners and illegal loggers are not concerned about the spreading of the virus and are perhaps even accelerating their activities as media attention is elsewhere and the government continues to weaken its own Amazon agencies.

The Amazon fire season usually peaks in July and the ground is unusually dry this year. Last year the smoke from the fires caused a big increase in people seeking medical help for breathing problems. The fires could peak just as Covid-19 might also be at its peak, bringing a nightmarish double impact to the people of the Amazon.

The Amazon is one of the natural jewels of our planet and contains indigenous people with unique cultures, but the twin threats of Brazil’s far-right government and the Covid-19 pandemic mean it has never been as at risk as it is today.

Dr Richard Dixon is director of Friends of the Earth Scotland

A message from the Editor:

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Thank you for reading this article on our website. While I have your attention, I also have an important request to make of you.

With the coronavirus lockdown having a major impact on many of our advertisers - and consequently the revenue we receive - we are more reliant than ever on you taking out a digital subscription.

Subscribe to scotsman.com and enjoy unlimited access to Scottish news and information online and on our app. With a digital subscription, you can read more than 5 articles, see fewer ads, enjoy faster load times, and get access to exclusive newsletters and content. Visit www.scotsman.com/subscriptions now to sign up.

Our journalism costs money and we rely on advertising, print and digital revenues to help to support them. By supporting us, we are able to support you in providing trusted, fact-checked content for this website.

Joy Yates

Editorial Director

Comments

 0 comments

Want to join the conversation? Please or to comment on this article.