The Daily - Why the Amazon Is Burning
Episode Date: August 28, 2019More than 26,000 fires have been recorded inside the Amazon rainforest in August alone, leading to global calls for action. But Brazil’s government has told the rest of the world to mind its own bus...iness. Guest: Ernesto Londoño, the Brazil bureau chief for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background coverage: Brazil began a military operation to battle the fires after European leaders threatened to cancel a trade deal and calls to boycott Brazilian products spread on social media.In many parts of Brazil, there is strong support for President Jair Bolsonaro’s Amazon policy, which prioritizes economic development over environmental protections.Here’s what we know about the fires.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today, more than 26,000 fires have been recorded inside the Amazon rainforest in August alone,
triggering global calls for action. So why is Brazil's government
telling the rest of the world to mind its own business?
It's Wednesday, August 28th.
Through the prism of Twitter or Facebook, I think a lot of people last week, understandably, engaged in this
communal panic about the fate of the world's largest rainforest. Ernesto Landano covers Brazil
for The Times. Urgent pleas to save the rainforest as the Amazon burns.
as the Amazon burns.
Forest fires are raging in the rainforest.
There have been nearly 73,000 fires this year already,
a more than 80% increase compared to last year.
With international protests,
the world is demanding action.
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, has described the fires as an international emergency.
You were seeing presidents, you were seeing celebrities.
And actor Leonardo DiCaprio working to help combat the wildfires in the Amazon rainforest.
You were seeing these really alarming posts and these photographs of patches of the rainforest on fire.
The smoke is traveling far and wide. I think many people understandably were left with
the impression that, you know, within a few days, the Amazon was going to be reduced to a pile of
ashes. The Amazon rainforest, the so-called lungs of the world, are now filling with smoke.
I think in many people's minds, there was a clear villain in all of this.
Directly blaming the record fires in the Amazon on Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro.
The president of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, who has shifted his government's approach on the
environment in a really traumatic way.
And scientists warn this could be a devastating blow to the fight against climate change.
And this is certainly a story about climate change.
And it's a story about President Bolsonaro.
And this is certainly a story about climate change, and it's a story about President Bolsonaro.
But it's a far more complicated story than we've been hearing.
So where should we start this story?
I mean, I think it's important to think about the history of the Amazon. The great Amazon River of South America is so deep and so wide
that the people of Brazil call it the River Sea.
I think for decades, the Amazon captured people's imagination
in a way that few places on Earth did.
The tropical rainforest biome is a complex community
exceedingly rich in many forms of plant and animal life, a showplace of natural history.
It was, you know, this mysterious and dangerous place that drew adventurers and scientists and botanists.
Through ceaseless evolution, a display of flora and fauna has developed here, unequaled anywhere else on land. And, you know, for many, many years,
it was kind of these images of this raw wildlife and kind of the mystique that laid under the
canopy that people were fascinated by. Moist, always green forests still cover one-tenth of
the Earth's land surface and comprise a large part of the total forest area of the world.
of the Earth's land surface and comprise a large part of the total forest area of the world.
It contains the largest supply of freshwater in the world
and is just teeming with biodiversity.
But in the 1970s, the Brazilian government,
which was then led by military rulers,
decided it was time to settle this vast rainforest.
The conquest of western Brazil began in 1970
with the construction of the Trans-Amazonian Highway.
And it created a road that cut through the Amazon
and started encouraging people to move there
and to start making a living there.
The dense bush gave way to large buildings where mining equipment is kept
and to silos which today hold a harvest of mineral plenty.
Their view was that the Amazon contained tons of resources, minerals,
land that could be converted into farmland,
and that it was time to turn it into an economic engine for Brazil.
The dream of gold, a heady prospect which has set men's hearts on fire since ancient times.
In modern-day Brazil, they've torn the earth asunder for it.
When it starts happening initially, you know, people realize that things are changing,
but there's no real alarm until a few years later when things get really out of control.
Or that glitters may indeed be gold and beautiful once it's cleaned.
But any short-term profits come not without a price to be paid.
Where trees start getting chopped down at a really staggering rate.
And that price is turning out to be high for humans and animals alike.
And people start realizing that the world's largest rainforest
is being destroyed, is atrophying at an astonishing speed.
These are some Indian friends of mine in the Amazon.
Their lives today are in great danger.
Their beautiful home in the rainforest
is being destroyed by logging, mining and ranching.
This sparks worldwide consternation,
and people start asking whether the Amazon
might cease to exist one day
if it continues to be destroyed at this rate.
This is the rainforest in 30 years
if present trends continue.
It's all gone.
The lungs of the earth destroyed.
You know, you had politicians, you had artists,
you had songs about this.
The rainforest, the tropical rainforest.
It really became a cultural moment.
Where the balance of nature's like a delicate lace.
We should have some compassion and show some concern.
Because the forest depends on what we learn.
People became very invested in this idea that everybody had a role to play in saving the Amazon.
Right, this is the Save the Rainforest campaign.
Yeah.
And does this movement have an effect in Brazil?
It does.
But I think it's important to note that it is greeted with very deep skepticism
and to an extent paranoia in some circles.
I think there's long been a view among conservative nationalist Brazilians
that all this outcry about the fate of the rainforest was really a veiled attempt to keep
Brazil from developing its God-given potential. I think many Brazilians saw these calls to preserve
the Amazon as infringing its sovereignty. And for many years, they were pretty dismissive about this
and they said that the fate of the Amazon was
only for Brazil and its neighbors to think about, debate about, and decide on.
So what happens to this development of the Amazon?
During the 1990s and the early 2000s, we see deforestation reaching really staggering levels.
Concern around the world, I think, reaches a point where the Brazilians can no longer
ignore what people outside of the country were saying about this.
So when President Lula, a leftist, is in office in the early 2000s, he appoints a woman who
was from the rainforest to serve as his minister of the environment. Her name is Marina
Silva. And she came up with a really bold and ambitious plan to rein in deforestation and create
more conservation areas. You know, she was somebody who was lauded across the world for doing something
that people thought was almost impossible to sort of stop these loggers and these miners and these farmers from reaching deeper and deeper into the Amazon year after year after year.
And for a while, Brazil was pretty successful.
So all of this outcry leads Brazil to begin regulating and slowing this development.
That's right.
Another thing the government did was it started issuing some pretty stiff fines for deforestation
and other environmental crimes.
And, you know, for a while, this had the intended effect.
And one of the reasons Brazil was successful in reining in deforestation during this era
is the economy was doing pretty well.
So there were plenty of jobs in the city and people were less tempted to venture deep into
the jungle where they faced the risk of fines. However, you know, the good days came to an end.
And in 2014, the country plunged into a brutal recession.
And what this meant was tens of thousands of men were suddenly unemployed,
and many of them were lured back into the jungle.
Why? Because there was money to be made.
These were dangerous jobs. These were risky ventures.
But for many people, it was the only way to put food on the table.
And so the deforestation started all over again.
Deforestation starts climbing again. We'll be right back.
Ernesto, so a recession hits and deforestation is back on the rise.
What does this mean for resilience? So around this time,
many people who were being fined for violating environmental laws were refusing to pay and,
you know, sensed that they could get away with it. And among them was a then congressman,
Jair Bolsonaro, who was allegedly busted fishing in a wildlife reserve. He refused to identify himself when the agent saw him,
but the agent recognized him, took his picture,
documented that he was in a wildlife reserve,
and issued him a citation.
Bolsonaro never bothered to pay his fine.
And then last year, when he's running for president
and when he becomes a frontrunner,
Mr. Bolsonaro said that the fines that were issued by this agency amounted to a racket.
He called it an industry that needed to be shut down.
So Bolsonaro, when he campaigns for president,
does so by kind of flagrantly disregarding the environmental protections of the Amazon.
And it seems like by tapping into this long-standing nationalist view
that the Amazon is a Brazilian resource that Brazilians should be tapping into.
And any effort to stop that is kind of a globalist intervention.
And it will hurt Brazil.
That's right, Michael.
But he wasn't only angry about environmental fines.
He was also very frustrated with indigenous territories. These are territories that now
cover about 13% of Brazil's landmass. And Mr. Bolsonaro spoke in unusually hostile terms about
indigenous people. He essentially said, you have these small
indigenous communities sitting on land that could be extremely profitable, and they should be allowed
to bring in outsiders to set up mining camps, to develop farmland, to start producing wealth.
And so his solution, it sounds like, is to develop more and more of the Amazon.
Absolutely. And when he wins, he wastes no time on delivering on his campaign promises on this front.
You know, one of his first steps in office was to give the Ministry of Agriculture control over the
process of adjudicating any new indigenous
territories. It was essentially kind of giving the people who had an interest in developing
these territories and changing their nature entirely the keys to the kingdom. You know,
environmentalists and indigenous activists were appalled and they braced for a bruising fight.
were appalled and they braced for a bruising fight.
So what happens when Bolsonaro starts making these changes across the government and allowing for more development of the Amazon?
Well, even before any new laws or regulations came to fruition, I think people out in the
countryside felt emboldened.
And we started hearing anecdotes of miners and
loggers striding into indigenous territories and other protected areas in a way that was more
visible and bolder than they had before. What we also see is a sharp rise in deforestation.
During the first six months of the Bolsonaro era, deforestation increased by roughly 40%.
And historically, the rate of deforestation has been closely linked to the prevalence of forest fires.
Right. So this is what we're seeing in all these photos online.
The Amazon is on fire and it's rampant deforestation under Bolsonaro that has caused it.
That's right.
And there were literally thousands of fires burning across the Amazon.
But I think what many people didn't quite understand was that this happens every year.
Around this time, when it tends to be cooler and drier across the Amazon,
there's sort of a slash and burn cycle that happens
where farmers and people who have logged patches of the Amazon
clear the bush and set it on fire.
And most of these fires tend to be relatively small and relatively contained.
But something was different this year.
The number was unusually high.
But something was different this year.
The number was unusually high.
You know, so far this month, there's been more than 26,000 fires detected through satellite imagery.
That's more than twice the number of fires registered last year.
But this was by no means an all-time high. You know, we've seen other periods in years past when there were far more fires burning across the Amazon.
I think what was different this year is you had all these alarming and widely shared posts on social media, some of which were using pictures that were many, many years old that weren't really an accurate reflection of what was happening on the ground this year.
So what do you make of that?
This response, which has been so enormous,
and the history and reality of this situation in Brazil.
Clearly, it has put a spotlight on a problem that is very real and very serious.
The Amazon is shrinking at a rate
that many scientists call unsustainable.
They fear that it's approaching a so-called tipping point
where large sections turn into savanna
and where it might be impossible to turn it back
into lush, thick rainforest.
However, I think the way this story got off the ground
may have been counterproductive
for the international community
to engage the Brazilian government
and its very impulsive leader in a constructive debate.
The European leaders threatened to scrap a major trade deal.
Brazil last week faced the prospect that a trade deal
that Brazil and a few neighboring countries reached with
the European Union could be nixed.
I think there's going to be an international reaction to boycott Brazilian food just to
protest.
There were calls to boycott Brazilian products.
French President Emmanuel Macron is now calling the fires an international crisis that should
be on the agenda at the G7 summit this weekend in France.
And the G7 leaders who were about to have their conference in France
said that this was going to be a last minute high profile item added to the agenda.
Brazil, I think, understandably said, wait a minute,
how are you going to discuss the fate of the Amazon when we're not at the table?
This makes no sense.
G7 leaders agreeing
to a $20 million financial aid package to help Brazil fight the fires in the Amazon. And even as
pledges of emergency aid started being dangled by European leaders and by organizations that,
you know, wanted to take some immediate and urgent action on these fires,
the Brazilian government, you know, wasn't ready to say, sure, we'll take the help.
So all this outrage, all these online photos, all these alarmed messages,
and this sense from Europe that this is a crisis that it can help solve.
How is that looking and feeling to people inside Brazil?
I think many Brazilians are deeply concerned about the fate of the Amazon, and they very much want their country to do more, to rein in deforestation,
and to pay attention to the messages that we're hearing from across the world.
You know, however, this is a very bitterly polarized society.
And on the flip side of that, I think many people resent the idea that European powers would bark down orders to a former colony and tell it how it needs to administer its affairs.
And that's certainly the approach the president has taken.
He recently said that if the Europeans had, you know, many million dollars to spend on conservation efforts,
that they should plant some trees in their own countries. So in Bolsonaro's mind, this is a
Brazilian issue, and the rest of the world should essentially mind its own business.
Absolutely. He says the Amazon is ours, and we're not going to entertain criticism or prescriptions from countries
that many years ago raised down their own forests and, you know, grew their economies in doing so.
So, you know, that's been his position, and it's hard to see him backing down.
It's interesting, Ernesto, as we're talking about this, I'm realizing that as horrifying
as the development of the rainforest might feel to people watching from the outside, and as scary as these fires
are, it does seem unusual for other countries to tell a country what it can and can't do
with its resources. You know, if the U.S. theoretically wants to blow up the Grand Canyon or log entire national parks, those might be insane ideas.
But no one can stop the United States from doing that.
You know, if we want to frack in West Virginia, it's up to us.
It's our land.
Many Brazilians say, hey, this is our territory.
This is our land.
Don't mess with our sovereignty.
But on the other hand, you know, the Amazon is a unique and special and irreplaceable place.
And, you know, if we contemplate the possibility that some 50 years from now it will disappear or become a fraction of itself. The consequences are very significant.
The Amazon is a repository of carbon.
So if it vanishes, there will be lots of carbon that will be released back into the atmosphere,
which will warm the planet. And if, as the rainforest diminishes,
more of its land becomes cattle-grazing pastures,
you know, that also would contribute to warming
because cattle grazing is one of the top emitters of greenhouse gas.
And so the rest of the world does have a stake in this fight.
Absolutely.
You know, I think right now,
the Brazilian government is in no mood
to open the door for this debate
and to have sort of a global discussion
about the fate of the Amazon.
But it's facing the real possibility
of a boycott of its products,
which people have been warning about on social media,
and of a core trade deal
that may now be on thin ice.
And if we see this debate going on for months, Brazil might be forced to come to the negotiating table and have this moment of reckoning with others across the world.
Ernesto, thank you very much.
My pleasure, Michael.
On Tuesday, after initially rejecting $22 million in aid from the countries of the G7 to fight the fires in the Amazon,
Brazil's government said it might accept
the aid under certain conditions. President Bolsonaro said he would take the money if
France's president, Emmanuel Macron, apologized for remarks about Brazil and its environmental record
that Bolsonaro said he found offensive.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Let's see a little bit of what you said in court.
All I'm going to say today is they have power.
Strength.
During an emotional hearing in Manhattan on Wednesday,
more than a dozen victims of Jeffrey Epstein's alleged sexual abuse
told their stories to a federal judge
and assailed a criminal justice system that they said had failed them.
It makes me sick to my stomach that there's perpetrators out there
that obviously helped him in many ways for a very long time, and they're
still out there with no punishment. The hearing was held to officially dismiss the charges against
Epstein following his suicide, which leaves prosecutors with no defendant to try. But it
gave his accusers a rare chance to speak out. Several of the women in the courtroom
addressed their remarks to the prosecutors,
urging them to keep investigating
Epstein's employees and associates,
who they said acted as his accomplices.
I was recruited at a very young age from Mar-a-Lago
and entrapped in a world that I didn't understand,
and I've been fighting that very world to this day,
and I won't stop fighting.
I will never be silenced
until these people are brought to justice.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Mavaro.
See you tomorrow.