Area of Amazon the size of New Jersey deforested in the past year

WinkOsmosis

Banned
Sep 18, 2002
13,990
0
0
... to grow soybeans.
Globalization is great. Standard of living goes down, cost of living goes up, the natural environment suffers. And you can blame it on the socialist president if you want.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/17/international/americas/17BRAZ.html

Relentless Foe of the Amazon Jungle: Soybeans
By LARRY ROHTER



UIABÁ, Brazil ? It takes only a trip on the busy but rutted highway that leads north from here to understand how an area of the Amazon jungle larger than New Jersey could have been razed over the course of just a year.

Where the jungle once offered shelter to parrots and deer, the land is now increasingly being cleared for soybeans, Brazil's hottest cash crop.

Soy cultivation is booming, driven by a coincidence of global demand from as far off as China and the local politics of state where the new governor was known as the Soybean King even before his election last October.


Today soybeans are eating up larger and larger chunks of the Amazon, leading to a 40 percent jump in deforestation last year, to nearly 10,000 square miles. Even the pastures where cows grazed until recently are being converted, pushing a cattle herd that has become the world's largest even deeper into the agricultural frontier.

"The new factor in the equation of Amazon deforestation is clearly soybeans and the appeal they hold for agribusiness," Stephan Schwartzmann, director of the Washington-based group Environmental Defense, said after a visit to the region in July.

A dry season that was unusually parched also appears to have figured in the surge in deforestation from August 2001 to July 2002, according to the country's National Institute for Space Research. So did a certain laxness in law enforcement, traditional during an election year, and a weak currency that made farming for export especially attractive, analysts have suggested.

But experts are unanimous in warning that as soybean farming continues to spread through the adjacent southern Amazon states of Mato Grosso and Pará, the threat to the Amazon ecological system is likely to worsen in the next few years.

Environmental groups had hoped that Brazil's left-wing president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, would take steps to combat deforestation. But Mr. da Silva has instead emphasized increasing agricultural production to swell exports and feed the urban poor, a position that has earned him criticism even from allies.

"The Amazon is not untouchable," Mr. da Silva said during a visit to the region in July. That view is strongly supported by Blairo Maggi, the new governor here in the state of Mato Grosso, who has repeatedly dismissed any concerns about deforestation.

Mr. Maggi, elected last year as the candidate of the Popular Socialist Party, and his family own one of Brazil's largest soy producers, transporters and exporters. The Soybean King, as the Brazilian press is fond of calling him, advocates soybeans as an engine of growth and development in the Amazon.

In fact, Mr. Maggi has called for nearly tripling the area planted with soybeans during the next decade in Mato Grosso, whose name means dense jungle. His own company, Grupo Maggi, announced early this year that it intended to double the area it has in production.

"To me, a 40 percent increase in deforestation doesn't mean anything at all, and I don't feel the slightest guilt over what we are doing here," Mr. Maggi said in an interview at his office here in Cuiabá, the capital of Mato Grosso. "We're talking about an area larger than Europe that has barely been touched, so there is nothing at all to get worried about."

Economists say that the main spur to the soybean boom is the emergence of a middle class in China, much of whose newly disposable income has been spent on a richer, more varied diet. During the past decade, China has been transformed from a net exporter of soybeans to the world's largest importer in some years of whole soybeans as well as oil and meal byproducts.

At the same time, the recent outbreak of mad cow disease in Europe has led to a sharp shift away from using ground-up animal body parts in feed, further increasing demand for soy protein for cattle and pigs.

Initially, the planting was focused in savanna in the area that the Brazilian government defines as Legal Amazonia, but which is not truly forest. But as soy prices rise, producers are pushing northward into the heart of the Amazon, especially along the 1,100-mile highway called BR163, which links this city to the Amazon port of Santarém.

With Mr. da Silva's support, state governments in the Amazon are pushing to complete the paving of highway BR163, which scientists and economists say would accelerate both deforestation and soy cultivation. Mr. Maggi said an agreement had been reached to split the paving costs among private interests and the state and federal governments.

Mr. Maggi rejected the argument advanced by his critics that there is an inherent conflict of interest between his roles as governor and businessman. "It's no secret that I want to build roads and expand agricultural production," he said. "The people voted for that, so I don't see the problem."

The soybean producers who backed Mr. Maggi have been calling for some jungle areas to be reclassified as transitional land or savanna. Brazilian law permits landowners to raze trees and brush and plant crops on 20 percent of their jungle holdings, but that figure rises to 50 percent in transitional areas and 65 percent in savannas.

During the interview, Mr. Maggi argued that the goal of more than doubling soybean production in his state over the next decade could be achieved "if we take full advantage of the deforestation ceiling of 20 percent without going beyond it." But most Brazilian and foreign experts disagree.

"It would be impossible for them to do that within the law" as currently written, said Dan Nepstad, an American scientist with the Amazon Institute for Environmental Research in Belém. "I suspect that is why they now want to play with the land classification scheme."

Much of last year's deforestation produced clouds of smoke so thick that some airplane flights had to be canceled. But beyond fouling the air with jungle burning, the rapid expansion of soybean production has also contributed to pollution of watersheds that feed into the Amazon, threatening isolated tribes.

Mr. Maggi says any pollution and deforestation problems are largely caused by thousands of poor families from other regions of Brazil that the federal government has settled on homesteads in remote areas of this frontier state.

Recent government research, however, indicates that only 17 percent of deforestation can be attributed to small peasant farmers trying to feed themselves.

 

ReiAyanami

Diamond Member
Sep 24, 2002
4,466
0
0
i guess we will only miss the enviroment when it is fully gone.


by fully gone i mean we've run out of oxygen to breath.
 

ReiAyanami

Diamond Member
Sep 24, 2002
4,466
0
0
for example, the thinning of the ozone layer. skin cancer rates have skyrocketed in australia by 25% in just 10 years. a single CFC molecule can destroy 10,000 O^3 molecules via catalytic reaction before naturally disenegrating.

man vs. nature, guess man wins, until nature is dead, then man loses.
 

rudder

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
19,441
86
91
Where have you been the last two decades??? This has been going on for some time. I remember back in the 80's the big fuss was over fast food chains clearing rain forests and trying to raise cattle on the land.
 

kage69

Lifer
Jul 17, 2003
28,019
38,496
136
Actually, I believe the algae in the oceans is responsible for the majority of Earth's oxygen production. Not that I condone cutting down the forests. Brazil is digging a grave for itself much the same way China is. So sad. :frown:
 

beyoku

Golden Member
Aug 20, 2003
1,568
1
71
yeah, what even worse is that the natives that are living in there are killed. i have seen documentaries were the fast food chain (or who ever is paying for the forest to be cleared) will pay mercs to go in and kick the natives out OR just kill them in cold blood. in 1991 i bought 3 acres of amazon land for 30.oo. i wonder if if its still there?
 

LordJezo

Banned
May 16, 2001
8,140
1
0
Are you dumb?

If you took the population of the world, split it up into families of four and gave them each a piece of land 50' x 35', the entire population of the planet would fit neatly into the state of Oregon.

Imagine yourself standing up in the middle of a circle about five feet in diameter. If the entire planet's population, stood in identical circles, they would ALL fit in the City of Jacksonville, Florida.

True, some areas are overly packed density wise, but the planet on a whole is no where near overpopulated.
 

Lucky

Lifer
Nov 26, 2000
13,126
1
0
If you took the population of the world, split it up into families of four and gave them each a piece of land 50' x 53', the entire population of the planet would fit neatly into the state of Oregon.



Widely quoted, but not true. If you put 6 billion people into oregon, the population density would be twice that of NYC's for the entire state. Since NYC is ~310 sq. miles, it would be the equivilant of 316 NYC's with twice the density. Certainly not enough room for 2500 sq. feet per family, and we aren't even including room for infrastructure, business, manufacturing, roads, blah blah blah.
 

LordJezo

Banned
May 16, 2001
8,140
1
0
I just did the math..

2 742 844 262 400 / (6 302 486 693 / 4) = 1 740.8013

Every family gets 1740 square feet of land.. comes out to be about 50x35.5 square feet per family
 

daniel1113

Diamond Member
Jun 6, 2003
6,448
0
0
At this rate, it will only take another... well, carry the seven, add two... 30 bazillion years before the amount of forest land in the world falls to a dangerous level. In other words, it's not a problem. Now, for those of you who truly believe that deforstation is a problem, do something about it! You could help educate peasants in tropical regions about proper farming techniques and such. Or, you could sit at home on your computer complaining.
 
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