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In Lula’s first 6 months, Amazon destruction has dropped 34%, reversing trend under Bolsonaro

Cattle grazing on deforested land in the Brazilian Amazon
Cattle graze on land recently burned and deforested by farmers in Brazil’s Pará state.
(Andre Penner / Associated Press)
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After four years of rising destruction in Brazil’s Amazon, deforestation dropped by 33.6% during the first six months of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s term, according to government satellite data released Thursday.

From January to June, the rainforest had alerts for possible deforestation covering 1,023 square miles, down from 1,544 square miles — an area the size of Rhode Island — during the same period last year under former President Jair Bolsonaro. This year’s data include a 41% plunge in alerts for June, which marks the start of the dry season, when deforestation tends to jump.

“The effort of reversing the curve of growth has been reached. That is a fact: We reversed the curve; deforestation isn’t increasing,” João Paulo Capobianco, the Environment Ministry’s executive secretary, said during a presentation in Brasília.

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Capobianco noted that full-year results will depend on a few challenging months ahead. Still, the data are an encouraging sign for Lula, who campaigned last year with pledges to rein in illegal logging and undo the environmental devastation during Bolsonaro’s term. The former far-right leader weakened environmental oversight with an insistence on development of the Amazon region that resonated with land grabbers and farmers who had long felt targeted by environmental laws. They were emboldened under Bolsonaro, and Amazon deforestation surged to a 15-year high.

Thursday’s deforestation data come from a system called Deter, managed by the National Institute for Space Research, a Brazilian federal agency. It is an initiative mainly focused on detecting real-time deforestation. The most accurate deforestation calculations come from another system called Prodes, with data released only annually.

“Bottom line, we are prioritizing environmental law enforcement,” Jair Schmitt, head of environmental protection at Ibama, Brazil’s federal environmental agency, said.

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A Brazilian nonprofit has created a new model for land ownership that welcomes local people and scientists to collaborate in preserving the Amazon.

However, the continued shortage of personnel means the task hasn’t been easy, he said. Many Ibama agents retired and weren’t replaced during Bolsonaro’s administration, reflecting his effort to defang environmental authorities. Lula has committed to restoring the workforce, but the number of Ibama’s enforcement agents remains at its lowest in 24 years. For a country that is bigger than the contiguous U.S., there are just 700 agents, with 150 available for deployment.

Ibama has also strengthened remote surveillance, where deforestation is detected through satellite imagery, according to Schmitt. By cross-referencing with land records, it is possible to identify the owner of the area in many cases, leading to an embargo that restricts access to financial loans and imposes other sanctions.

Another strategy has been to seize thousands of illegally raised cattle within embargoed areas. It is effective because it inflicts immediate punishment, whereas fines are rarely paid in Brazil because of a slow appeals process, Schmitt said.

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Rodrigo Agostinho, the head of Ibama, noted in the presentation Thursday that the value of fines imposed in the first half of the year jumped 167% from the 2019-2022 average, and the agency embargoed 2,086 areas — up 111%.

The Indigenous adolescents danced in a circle under the thatched-roof hut from nearly dawn to dusk while parents looked on from the perimeter.

“We started the year with a lot of difficulty because of everything we inherited — reorganizing all the enforcement teams, environmental protection, reactivating tech systems,” said Agostinho.

Improved deforestation data also reflect the change in rhetoric coming from the top, said Schmitt. Whereas Bolsonaro openly criticized Ibama and advocated for the legalization of deforested areas, Lula has said he will rebuild law enforcement and promised to expel invaders from protected areas. Experts say the mere expectation that a land-grabbed area would eventually be regularized has historically been one of deforestation’s biggest drivers.

It may be premature to celebrate the reversal in the deforestation trend, however. According to satellite monitoring, there were 3,075 fires in the Amazon in June alone, which marks the beginning of the dry season — the most since 2007. The jump is due to the clearing of areas deforested in the second half of 2022, Schmitt said. In the Amazon, fires are mostly man-made and occur after clear-cutting of the forest.

With El Niño looming, which typically brings less rain and higher temperatures to the Amazon, Ibama has doubled its budget for fighting forest fires and increased the scope of its fire squads by 17% for the most critical period, typically July to October. Approximately half of the 2,117 temporary firefighters are Indigenous peoples.

When Brazil’s environmental authority busted an illegal gold mine, they found something that is becoming common at such sites: a Starlink unit.

The Amazon rainforest covers an area twice the size of India and holds tremendous stores of carbon, serving as a crucial buffer against climate change. Two-thirds of it is located in Brazil.

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Next month, Lula will preside over a meeting in Belém, bringing together heads of state from all Amazonian nations to discuss means to cooperate effectively in the challenging region. Lula has promised to end net deforestation in Brazil’s Amazon by 2030. His current four-year mandate — his third term as president — ends two years before that.

To achieve the goal, law enforcement alone will not be enough, says Adevaldo Dias, a rubber-tapper leader who presides over the Chico Mendes Memorial, a nonprofit organization that assists traditional non-Indigenous communities in the Amazon.

“It is necessary to invest in sustainable productive chains under community management, such as managed pirarucu [arapaima] fishing, Brazil nuts, vegetable oils, and açaí,” he told the Associated Press. “This will help revitalize and expand these chains, generating decent income for those engaged in conservation efforts within their territories.”

Ibama’s Agostinho also stressed his agency’s efforts within Indigenous territories, particularly the land of the Yanomami people, which thousands of illegal gold miners invaded during Bolsonaro’s term.

Their activities contaminated waterways and sickened local people, and Lula’s government has spent months expelling most of them. Some remain, however, working at night to avoid being caught, Agostinho said.

“We are very content with the result so far,” he said. “We know the fight isn’t over. We will continue doing this work.”

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