BirdLife: The Magazine Oct - Dec 2019 | Page 23

A Z E plummeted 80% by 2012. By 2010, 44% – an area the size of Greenland – was protected or designated as indigenous land. The emission of 3.2 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide was avoided. No more an environmental vandal, Brazil became fêted worldwide. Remarkably, it spared forests while simultaneously boosting agricultural production – cattle by one-fifth and soy by two-thirds. Brazil had decoupled development from deforestation. Lula da Silva’s deforestation-reducing initiatives derived their legitimacy and impetus from an existing piece of legislation called the Forest Code. No single law worldwide has levied such stringent demands on forest owners. Launched in 1965, it required private landowners to set aside 20—50% of native forests as ‘legal reserves’, a proportion upped to 80% in 1996. But it was a law under pressure. Come 2012, a year into Dilma Rousseff’s presidency, powerful agribusiness interests were fed up with the Code’s constraints. They lobbied successfully for dilutions to the Forest Code. The ‘New Forest Code’ granted amnesty for landholders who had illegally deforested 290,000 km2 prior OCT-DEC 2019 • BIRDLIFE to 2008. Some conservationists were appalled. If old crimes could be pardoned, how could the New Forest Code realistically deter fresh deforestation? Such fears were warranted. Rousseff declined to sign the 2014 New York Declaration on Forests, which pledged to eliminate all deforestation by 2030; she would commit only to ending illegal deforestation. Amazon deforestation started rising and, despite two brief downticks, continued to burgeon during Michel Temer’s presidency (2016–18). But it is the rapid surge in deforestation during Jair Bolsonaro’s presidency that has really riled conservationists. Riding, in the words of The Washington Post, “a wave of voter rage” and right-wing nationalism, Bolsonaro took power in January 2019. His effect on the environment appears swift and intense. Bolsonaro is opening up protected lands for commercial use, pressing plans for new transport infrastructure that will facilitate loggers’ access to Amazonian forests. He has eviscerated government bodies protecting the environment and managing conservation areas. Bolsonaro has sacked senior government An artist’s impression of the blazes which ripped through the Amazon this past summer Photo OSORIOartist 0 23