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Satellite data suggests deforestation on the rise in Brazil

Drone view of Chiquitano forest recently deforested on the edge of the Bolivian Amazon for soy production. Photo by Rhett A. Butler for Mongabay.

Drone view of Chiquitano forest recently deforested on the edge of the Bolivian Amazon for soy production. Photo by Rhett A. Butler for Mongabay.

  • Newly released data based on analysis of satellite imagery suggests that deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has risen relative to last year.
  • On June 21, the Brazil-based research NGO Imazon published its May 2019 deforestation report, showing the area of forest cleared in the Brazilian Amazon over the past 12-months is 43 percent higher than a year ago, according to short-term alert data.
  • However, data from Brazil’s National Space Research Institute INPE shows a much-smaller increase of 1 percent for the period.
  • Brazil is now entering the peak deforestation season so environmentalists are closely watching to see whether the recent trend continues or accelerates.

Newly released data based on analysis of satellite imagery suggests that deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has risen relative to last year.

On June 21, the Brazil-based research NGO Imazon published its May 2019 deforestation report, showing that 797 square kilometers of forest were cleared in the Brazilian Amazon during the month. That figure brings the 12-month running total to 4,916 square kilometers, 43 percent higher than the year-ago total.

However, data from Brazil’s National Space Research Institute INPE shows a much-smaller increase of 1 percent for the period, from 4,565 square kilometers for the 12 months ended May 31, 2018 to 4,633 square kilometers for the current period.

Brazil is now entering the peak deforestation season, which corresponds to the dry season that typically runs from mid-May to late September. During this period, deforestation may be twice as high as the annual monthly average.

Accordingly, environmentalists are closely watching to see whether the recent trend continues or accelerates. Civil society groups and conservationists are worried that President Jair Bolsonaro’s recent moves to weaken indigenous rights and environmental regulations could spur a return to the high deforestation rates of the 1990s and early 2000s.

Brazil has been widely lauded for its efforts to reduce deforestation since the mid-2000s, turning the country from a pariah in environmental circles into a model for emulation. A combination of satellite monitoring, law enforcement, creation of new protected areas and indigenous researchers, private sector action, activist campaigns, and macroeconomic factors contributed to falling deforestation rates over the period.

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