Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Election silence as fires level Brazil’s rainforest

- BY FABIANO MAISONNAVE Maisonnave writes for the Associated Press.

RIO DE JANEIRO — September has come and gone, marking another painful milestone for the world’s largest rainforest. It’s the worst month for fire in the Amazon in more than a decade.

Satellite sensors detected more than 42,000 fires in 30 days, according to Brazil’s national space institute. It is the first time since 2010 that fires in the Amazon surpassed 40,000 in a single month.

This September was 2½ times worse than last. Coming at the peak of the dry season, it’s usually the worst month not only for fire but also for deforestat­ion.

The official data for forest loss only go through Sept. 23 so far, yet are already 14% more devastatin­g than those of September 2021. In just those three weeks, the Amazon lost 434 square miles of rainforest, an area larger than New York City.

The surge in forest fire occurs amid a polarizing presidenti­al campaign. Far-right President Jair Bolsonaro is seeking a second four-year term against leftist former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, known as Lula, who ruled between 2003 and 2010 and leads in the polls. The first round of voting is Sunday.

Despite the smoke clogging the air of entire Amazon cities, state elections have largely ignored environmen­tal issues. Besides the presidenti­al race, Brazilians will also elect governors and state and national parliament­s.

In Para state, worst for both deforestat­ion and fire, the subject of deforestat­ion was barely touched on during a TV debate among gubernator­ial candidates held Tuesday by the Globo network.

Over an hour and a half, only one candidate mentioned the increase in deforestat­ion. Globo, Brazil’s leading television network, did not even select it as one of eight debate topics.

Protecting the forest is not a high priority for the population, after years of pandemic and a deteriorat­ing economy, Paulo Barreto, a researcher with the nonprofit Amazon Institute of People and the Environmen­t, told the Associated Press. “But the fact that journalist­s don’t ask is an even bigger problem.” Deforestat­ion can lead to more poverty, he said. “On the other hand, there are growing economic opportunit­ies related to conservati­on.”

Fire in the Amazon is almost always deliberate­ly set, to improve cattle pasture or burn recently felled trees once they are dry. Often the fires burn out of control and reach pristine forest areas.

Studies have shown that deforestat­ion rates peak in election years, and 2022 has been particular­ly intense because of Bolsonaro’s anti-environmen­tal rhetoric, according to analysts.

“With a chance of changing the government to one that promises more rigor, it seems that the deforester­s are taking advantage of the possibilit­y that the party’s over,” Barreto said.

Since Bolsonaro took office, in 2019, deforestat­ion has been on the rise, as his administra­tion has defanged environmen­tal authoritie­s and backed measures to loosen land protection­s, emboldenin­g environmen­tal offenders.

Bolsonaro has repeatedly denied that fire is even increasing, despite official data from his government agency. On Thursday night, during the final presidenti­al debate before the vote, he said that forest fires occur periodical­ly in the Amazon, dismissed the criticism as a “war of narratives,” and said Brazil “is an example to the world” on conservati­on.

It was an answer to Simone Tebet, a senator who is close to agribusine­ss leaders and considered a moderate in the race. In one of the few moments free of personal insults, she criticized Bolsonaro’s environmen­tal record in a segment related to climate change.

“Your administra­tion is the one that has set biomes, forests and my Pantanal wetlands on fire. Your administra­tion favored miners and loggers, and protected them,” she said. “You, in this regard, were the worst president in Brazil’s history.”

Lula has promised to restore law enforcemen­t and gained support from Indigenous and environmen­tal leaders, such as former Environmen­t Minister Marina Silva. She had broken publicly with the former president over his push to build hydroelect­ric dams and other developmen­t initiative­s in the Amazon.

In announcing her support during a meeting with Lula a few weeks ago, she called Bolsonaro a threat to Brazil’s democracy.

 ?? Edmar Barros Associated Press ?? FIRE CREWS head to a burned area in Apui in Amazonas state of northweste­rn Brazil last month.
Edmar Barros Associated Press FIRE CREWS head to a burned area in Apui in Amazonas state of northweste­rn Brazil last month.

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