Carlos Minc, the Environment minister of Brazil, claims increased policing have brought a sharp drop in Amazon deforestation over the past year, despite July’s jump in logging. Minc says there has been a 46% fall in the rainforest’s destruction since July 2008, with just 4375 sq km cleared.
He also predicts that 2009 will witness a significant decline in clearing. However, satellite data obtained by the Brazilian government suggests that some 8365 sq km were cleared in July alone, an increase on the previous year. Minc says that the 8500 sq km expected to be felled in 2009 is an improvement.
“Deforestation rates are still very high, but this year we will have the smallest deforestation rate of the past 21 years,” he said. A peak of 27,329 sq km was cleared in the 2003/2004 period, Minc added.
The drop may allow Brazil to claim some success at delivering on a pledge to reduce deforestation during a major world climate summit in Copenhagen this December. The government has been under pressure to slow the encroachment of loggers and ranchers for decades, while attempting to develop the resource-rich region.
Deforestation has in the past increased when demand for soy beans, beef and timber have gone up, and officials point out that when police attempt to confiscate trucks loaded with illegal wood, the situations can turn violent very quickly.
Look at any de-facto multinationals’ colony - in Africa, Australia or oil-supplying Middle East.