
3 minute read
The Amazon is not safe under Brazil’s new president
CONSERVATIONISTS breathed a sigh of relief when Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva won Brazil’s presidential election in the fall of 2022.
His predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro, had opened large parts of the Amazon region to business by crippling enforcement of environmental laws and turning a blind eye to land grabbing.
It should come as no surprise that deforestation showed a sharp uptick.
However, while Lula oversaw a more than 70 percent drop in deforestation during his first run as president in the early 2000s, the rainforest’s future remains deeply uncertain.
That’s in part because Brazilian administrations, whether of the right or left, have all promoted an ambitious project to boost exports and the economy called the Initiative for the Integration of the Regional Infrastructure of South America (IIRSA).
The initiative focuses on new roads, dams and industry that can threaten the region’s fragile rainforest ecosystem—and harm the world’s climate in the process.
Problem with infrastructure in the forest
AT first glance, IIRSA might sound like progress. Its goal is to improve Amazonia’s economy by developing its resources and establishing better access to global markets.
To accomplish this, the initiative plans to rehabilitate and extend the existing highway system and build dams, ports, industrial waterways and railroads.
However, evidence from my research in the Amazon over the past 30 years and by other scientists shows that new roads lead to more deforestation, putting extreme pressure on the rainforest.
Outside of protected areas, nearly 95 percent of all deforestation occurs within 3.4 miles (5.5 kilometers) of a road, or less than two-thirds of a mile (1 km) from a river.
Deforestation rates fell during Lula’s first presidency, primarily because Brazil expanded its protected areas program and enforced environmental laws.
However, deforestation began to rise again during the administration of his protégé, President Dilma Rousseff.
Both Lula and Rousseff furthered the IIRSA agenda by building dams on the Madeira River and on the Xingu River, where the Belo Monte dam diverted streamflow vital to the survival of Indigenous communities.
They also downsized protected areas to make way for their projects. Rousseff even downsized Amazon National Park, the first such park in Amazonia.
In all, 181 square miles (469 square kilometers) were removed, close to 5 percent of the total area. The most scenic park landscape along the Tapajos River shoreline was taken to make way for dam construction.
Now back in office, Lula has signaled his approval of a key IIRSA project: the revitalization of BR-319, a federal highway between Porto Velho and Manaus.
If this project is completed, it will open the central Amazon basin to even more deforestation.
The Amazonian tipping point
I BELIEVE this should cause alarm. Research shows too much deforestation could push the forest over a tipping point from which it can’t recover.
No one knows exactly where the line is, but the vast Amazon that people picture today with its extraordinary biodiversity and dense forests would be no more.
Such a catastrophe once seemed the bad dream of doomsayers, but there is mounting evidence that the forest is in trouble.
The tropical rainforest sustains itself by recycling rain to the atmosphere through evapotranspiration, which makes more moisture available.
Rainfall recycling accounts for about 50 percent of the basin’s precipitation today.
Too much deforestation could leave too little rainfall recycling to sustain the forest.
Scientists initially estimated the tipping point would occur once about 40 percent of the Amazon was deforested. That estimate has slipped downward over time given the intensification of fires and the onset of observable climate change in the basin itself.
Moreover, the forest shows diminishing resilience, meaning it is less able to recover from climate extremes.
Scientists have already observed widespread shifts to more drought-tolerant tree species. Given the evidence, scientists have revised the tipping point to deforestation as low as 20 percent to 25 percent.
Even if only a fifth of the forest is lost, the remainder could quickly degrade into an ecosystem of fire-adapted grasses and shrubby trees that look nothing like the massive ones native to the rainforest.
Deforestation across all the Amazonian nations now stands at a little over 16 percent. In my view, this is far too close for comfort, especially with the momentum of the IIRSA program.
More than one tipping point?
THE deforestation problem isn’t the only pressure on the forest—the Amazon is also dealing with the heat and drought of global warming.
Evidence suggests that global climate change may be enough to push large parts of the rainforest to the brink.
One concern is that the dry season is getting longer, a shift that appears to be driven by global warming. This affects annual precipitation by reducing the number of rainy days and makes fire more damaging by extending the season when trees can easily burn.
Currently, dry season lengthening is most pronounced in the Southern Basin. However, changes in the southern rainfall pattern can reduce precipitation in the wettest parts of the basin to the west. One estimate suggests dry season lengthening could cause a tipping point transition by 2064. Robert T. Walker, University of Florida/The Conversation (CC) via AP