Brazilian Loggers Double Amazon Deforestation Hoping for Amnesty

Logging in the Brazilian Amazon In Brazil, deforestation rates in the Amazon, the world’s biggest rain forest, more than doubled last month as farmers become more confident they’ll be granted amnesty for illegal logging.

Almost 268 square kilometers of protected rain forest were cut down in May, up from 110 square kilometers a year ago, the National Institute for Space Research informed.

Brazil lawmakers are considering a bill that alters its forestry code and would forgive farmers who illegally cleared trees. The possibility that the government may ease these restrictions is encouraging more logging, said Márcio Astrini, coordinator of forest campaigns for Greenpeace International’s Brazil unit.

“Brazil has been reducing its deforestation for the last five years and this bill comes along and now it shoots up,” Astrini said. “There is only one reason why deforestation is increasing: it’s called the forestry code,” which may be changing.

The bill was approved by Brazil’s lower house May 24 by a 410-63 vote. The Senate has not yet voted on it and President Dilma Rousseff has vowed to veto the legislation if it does pass.

If the bill is approved in its current form, farmers won’t have to replant trees that were illegally cut prior to July 2008, an estimated 30 million hectares (twice the area of neighboring Uruguay), according to a study by government research agency Instituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada, IPEA. Under Brazil’s current forestry code, penalties for illegal logging include fines and a requirement to replant trees.

Some farmers are stepping up their illicit activities in the hope the government “will hand out further amnesties in the future,” or won’t be able to discern which trees were cut after the 2008 deadline, according to Fabio Alves, a specialist for IPEA.

About 35% of forests cleared in May were in Mato Grosso, Brazil’s biggest soy-producing state, according to Sao Jose dos Campos-based National Institute for Space Research.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Transgenics Is Like the Plague and Brazil Caught It

On March 4, 2005, Brazil’s Law of Biosecurity, which legalizes the planting and commercialization ...

MST invades a farm in Pernambuco, Brazil

Brazilian Police Arrest Gunmen Hired to Kill Landless Leader

The Municipal Police of Aliança of Pernambuco state's Northern Zona da Mata, in Brazil, ...

Brazil to Use World Cup to Promote Brazilian Goods in Germany

If 2005 was the Year of Brazil in France, 2006 will be Germany’s turn ...

Brazil Wants to Help 2.2 Million Illiterate Teens and Adults

Around 2.2 million Brazilian youngsters and adults are expected to be served by the ...

Brazil Empire Lives On

Brazil has not completely finished the process of becoming a Republic. Nor has it ...

Brazil’s Shoe Factory to Invest US$ 11 Million

The shoes factory Calçados Beira Rio, from the southernmost Brazilian state of Rio Grande ...

Brazil’s Politicians Set to Cash in on Oil and Gas Discoveries

As if Brazil was not blessed with a bounty of natural resources it seems ...

Brazil to Export US$ 2 Billion in Software

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva reaffirmed that, until 2007, Brazil intends to export ...

The End of the Dollar Black Market in Brazil

Brazil’s Central Bank informed that the unification of the commercial and tourist currency exchange ...

American pilots Joe Lepore and Jan Paladino

Brazil’s Supreme Says American Pilots Can’t Be Compelled to Testify in Brazil

Ellen Gracie Northfleet, the chief of the Brazilian Supreme Court (STF), told the president ...