Sunday, September 09, 2007

"As Brazil's rain forest burns down, planet heats up"

TAILANDIA, Brazil — ...As vast tracts of rain forest are cleared, Brazil has become the world’s fourth-largest producer of the greenhouse gases that cause global warming, after the United States, China and Indonesia, according to the most recent data from the U.S.-based World Resources Institute.

And while about three-quarters of the greenhouse gases emitted around the world come from power plants, transportation and industrial activity, more than 70 percent of Brazil’s emissions comes from deforestation.

Burning and cutting the forest releases hundreds of millions of tons of carbon dioxide, methane and other gases that the vegetation had trapped. Those gases collect in the atmosphere, prevent heat from escaping and help raise the Earth's temperature.

Keeping greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere has become crucial to saving the planet from catastrophic climate change, scientists say. However, stopping the destruction of the vast Amazon rain forest means confronting the region’s lawlessness and persuading Brazilian (farmers) to leave the forest alone.

“Brazil has a huge amount of forest that’s still there, and that means Brazil has a much greater role in terms of future deforestation,” said Philip Fearnside, a research professor at Brazil’s National Institute for Amazon Research. “Any changes that happen here have great influence on whether the Earth gets warmer.”

The 1.5-million-square-mile Brazilian Amazon, larger than the entire nation of India, contains more than 40 percent of the world’s rain forests, and about a fifth of it already has disappeared, mostly in an "arc of deforestation” along the forest’s southern and eastern edges.

Every year, another chunk of forest the size of Connecticut or larger disappears as farmers, illegal loggers and others clear jungle, mostly without government approval. Violent clashes over land are common, as are murders of environmentalists.

Stopping the destruction means persuading people such as wood merchant Francisco de Assis to give up selling illegal lumber extracted from the rain forest around the northern Brazilian town of Tailandia.

The town, little more than a wide spot on the highway a decade ago, has grown into a 54,000-person city of sawmills, bars and hastily built shacks. It also has Brazil’s seventh-highest homicide rate.

“This business is keeping people alive,” de Assis said on a recent afternoon as he led potential buyers through just-cleared jungle. “But I don’t think there’ll be any wood left here in a few years.”

The effects of the Amazon’s continued destruction could be especially severe in southern Brazil, where much of the country’s agriculture, industry and population is based. About 40 percent of the precipitation there comes from moisture evaporated off the rain forest’s thick tree cover. Cutting back more of the Amazon could mean starving the area of water.

“The hydroclimatic cycle of the Amazon really depends on having forest there,” said Thomas Lovejoy, president of the U.S.-based H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics and the Environment. “It’s all rolled into one big picture, which in the end comes down to what happens to the forest.”

Veteran diplomat Sergio Serra, who in April was named Brazil’s first ambassador in charge of global warming issues, said his country is doing its part by, among other things, strengthening enforcement of environmental laws and creating vast forest reserves.

As a result, he said, the rate of deforestation in the Amazon dropped by about 50 percent from August 2004 to July 2006. Environmentalists said lower global prices for soybeans grown in the Amazon, as well as tougher enforcement, help explain the drop.

“Brazil is conscious of its responsibilities,” Serra said. “We are already combating the problem with more vigor, and that led to this significant decline.”

....Any plan to crack down on deforestation, however, depends on the government’s ability to enforce its laws, which farmers said is practically nonexistent in much of the jungle...

That means land owners such as Dario Bernardes who want to go green often find themselves at the mercy of the jungle’s notorious lawlessness.

Bernardes tried switching to sustainable forestry in 1994 on his 57,700-acre ranch near Tailandia and even won certification from the international Forest Stewardship Council, meaning he could export the wood as higher priced, forest-friendly lumber.

All that untouched land, however, proved too great a temptation, and armed loggers poured in last year and devastated the property. Federal officials said they'd visited the area and seized illegal wood but couldn’t stop the loggers from returning...

“We tried doing this the right way, but we received no support at all,” Bernardes said. “If this continues, I don’t give the Amazon 50 more years.”

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