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37,000 sq km of Amazon rainforest destroyed or damaged in 2008Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.comMarch 19, 2009 New satellite system provides a more detailed look at forest degradation and may help Brazil stop deforestation before it occurs. The increase in activity has been attributed to the sharp rise in commodity prices over the past two years. While grain and meat prices have plunged since last March, higher prices have provided an impetus for converting land for agriculture and pasture. Accordingly, the burning season of 2007 (July-September) saw record numbers of fires in some parts of the Amazon as farmers, speculators, and ranchers set vast areas ablaze to prepare for the 2008 growing season. The high levels of degradation relative to deforestation for 2007-2008 may be an indication that some of the area slated for development was abandoned — before clearing — as commodity prices fell.
Monitoring deforestation before it occurs The new system, dubbed DEGRAD, is based on special processing of satellite images provided by LANDSAT and the China-Brazil Earth Resources Satellite (CBERS). DEGRAD may allow Brazil to become the first rainforest nation to accurately track carbon dioxide released during deforestation and forest degradation, the source of roughly two-thirds of Brazil's greenhouse gas emissions. Such monitoring capacity is critical to REDD, a proposed mechanism for compensating countries for reducing such emissions. Brazil expects to enhance the system when it launches the Amazon-1, an advanced satellite that will use cloud-penetrating technology to allow more detailed monitoring of the Amazon. ![]() This image, courtesy of INPE, shows the various forms of forest degradation by logging. (A) shows degradation of moderate intensity in an area where forest is regenerating after logging; (B) shows degradation of high intensity during active logging; (C) shows degradation of light intensity following the opening of an access road. INPE says DEGRAD could help stop deforestation before it occurs by pinpointing areas where forest degradation is occurring. Identifying fronts for deforestation prior to actual clearing will allow authorities to take preventative measures, including determining the legality of the forest activities. Brazil recently laid out an ambitious plan to reduce Amazon deforestation by 70 percent from a 1996-2005 baseline but it expects industrialized countries to help finance the effort. In August President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva unveiled a $21 billion donation-based fund to finance conservation and sustainable development projects in the region. Norway has already committed a billion dollars to the initiative provided Brazil meet its targets for stemming forest loss. Brazil accounts for approximately sixty percent of the Amazon rainforest and the bulk of the region's deforestation. While less than 20 percent of the vast forest has been cleared, regional climate trends indicate that large swathes of the Amazon are increasingly susceptible to drought and fire. Coupled with continued deforestation, degradation, and fragmentation, some researchers say the Amazon is approaching a critical tipping point which could see more than half of the forest damaged or destroyed within a generation. Data from DEGRAD is now freely available online at www.obt.inpe.br/degrad More charts ![]() ![]() ![]() State figures for deforestation and degradation in the Brazilian Amazon.
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