El Dorado News-Times

Stop tearing down old trees

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One of the easiest ways to combat climate change is to stop tearing down old trees. This is why it is everyone's problem that new Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro seems determined to chop away at the Amazon rainforest, the world's greatest reserve of oldgrowth forest.

According to a recent analysis in the New York Times, "enforcemen­t actions by Brazil's main environmen­tal agency fell by 20 percent during the first six months of the year, compared with the same period in 2018." Fines, warnings and the eliminatio­n of illegal equipment from preservati­on zones are among the measures Brazil's authoritie­s are doing less often. "The drop means that vast stretches of the rain forest can be torn down with less resistance from the nation's authoritie­s." The result has been a loss of 1,330 square miles of rainforest since January, a loss rate that is some 40 percent higher than a year previous, according to Brazilian government records.

Mr. Bolsonaro has called his own government's informatio­n "lies," stripped the environmen­t ministry of authoritie­s and slashed the environmen­tal budget.

When eight former environmen­t ministers protested in May, current environmen­t minister Ricardo Salles alleged that there is a "permanent and well-orchestrat­ed defamation campaign by (nongovernm­ental organizati­ons) and supposed experts, within and outside of Brazil."

In its reality denial, Mr. Bolsonaro's brand of right-wing populism closely resembles that of President Trump. Both leaders stoke unfounded suspicions that environmen­tal concerns represent foreign plots to undermine the domestic economy. Both are committed to breakneck resource extraction while dismissing expert warnings. And both lead nations with special responsibi­lities in the global fight against climate change. Global warming cannot be successful­ly addressed without the engagement of the United States, the world's largest historical emitter of greenhouse gases and erstwhile leader. The Brazilian Amazon, meanwhile, is a unique natural treasure, its abundance of plant life inhaling and storing loads of planet-warming carbon dioxide day and night. Without "the world's lungs," life on the planet is doomed.

Earlier this month, the journal Science published a paper finding that, if world leaders made reforestat­ion a priority, the planet's ecosystems could accommodat­e massive numbers of new trees — perhaps hundreds of billions more. True, reforestat­ion advocates would no doubt have to compete with those who would use land for other purposes, particular­ly as the world population increases. Even so, the paper's authors note, their work "highlights global tree restoratio­n as our most effective climate change solution to date."

This is not to say that the fight against global warming is as easy as planting a few, or even billions, of trees, if such a thing were politicall­y or logistical­ly feasible. As long as humans depend on carbon-emitting sources of fuel for energy, the atmosphere's chemistry will continue to change and the climate will be in peril. But it does suggest that leaders such as Mr. Bolsonaro, who are leading in the opposite direction, can do particular­ly extreme damage to the effort to restrain climate change.

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