by Claire F.r. Wordley
April
26, 2019
from
PHYS Website
Spanish
version
Brazil's forest loss 2001-2013 shown in red.
Indigenous lands outlined.
Credit: Mike Clark
GlobalForestWatch.org,
Author provided
The effects of European consumption are being felt in Brazil,
driving disastrous
deforestation and violence. But the
destruction can end if
the European Union demands higher
environmental standards on Brazilian goods.
Hundreds of scientists
and Indigenous leaders agree:
the time to act is
now, before it's too late.
In an open letter (Make
EU trade with Brazil sustainable)
published today in the journal Science, more than 600
scientists from every country in the European Union (EU) and 300
Brazilian Indigenous groups asked the EU to demand tougher
standards for Brazilian imports.
The letter calls on the EU to ensure a trade deal with Brazil
respects human rights and the natural world. Crucially, this can be
done without harming Brazil's agriculture, if already cleared land
is used to its full potential.
Indeed, in the long term,
farming in the region depends on the rains brought by
healthy forests.
Destruction of
the Amazon under Bolsonaro
Brazil's Indigenous people and the forests they protect are facing
annihilation.
Controversial president
Jair Bolsonaro is opening
the Amazon rainforest to business and threatening
Indigenous people who stand in the way.
In his first hours in
office, Bolsonaro gave power over Indigenous land to the Ministry of
Agriculture, which is widely seen to be controlled by corporate
lobbyists.
In the months since, he has axed environmental roles in the
government and planned three major building projects in the Amazon,
including a bridge over the river itself.
As Bolsonaro scraps environmental laws, forests are being cut down
faster than they have been in years. And the EU is helping drive
this carnage:
more than a football
field of Brazilian rainforest is cut down every hour to produce
livestock feed and meat for Europe.
Although the situation
may seem dire for the Amazon and its inhabitants, ongoing trade
talks provide a chance to act.
Billions of Euros flow to Brazil from business with the EU, its
second-largest trade partner. Goods flowing in the other direction
include environmentally and socially destructive livestock feed
(usually soy grown on deforested land) which enters the EU on a
tariff-free basis.
Right now, European
consumers have no way of knowing how much blood is actually in their
hamburger. The ongoing EU-Brazil trade talks are therefore a
powerful opportunity to curb Bolsonaro's appetite for
destruction...
It is hard to overstate the case for strong action from Europe.
People in Brazil -
especially Indigenous and local communities - are being violently
repressed when trying to defend their land against agricultural and
mining companies.
Brutal
repression and environmental catastrophe
This violence has reached record levels under Bolsonaro, with at
least nine people murdered so far in April 2019. And genocide is a
real possibility if nothing is done to protect Indigenous people and
their land.
Alarmingly, Bolsonaro has even said:
"It's a shame that
the Brazilian cavalry hasn't been as efficient as the Americans,
who exterminated the Indians."
On top of the horrifying
assault on Brazil's original inhabitants, demolishing the country's
forests, savannas and wetlands would have devastating consequences
for the world.
If the Amazon rainforest alone is destroyed, the resulting carbon
emissions could make it extremely difficult to limit global warming
to less than two degrees.
Burning fossil fuels is
often seen as the only culprit in climate breakdown, but
tropical deforestation is the
second-largest source of carbon emissions in the world.
Even losing part of the Amazon could cause a tipping point where the
forests no longer create enough rain to sustain themselves. This
would cause droughts that would drive many species to extinction,
devastate farming in the region and likely cause further violence.
We must act
now
We are not just at an ecological tipping point, but a social one,
too.
The world is waking up to
the risks posed by destroying our climate and natural world.
Climate change is considered the
number one security threat by Brazilian people and by many European
nations.
Europeans believe neither their country nor the EU is doing enough
to protect our planet's life support systems. As protests flare up
in Europe over environmental crises, climate change will be a key
issue in the upcoming European elections.
As scientists, we use emotive words carefully. But our open letter
calls on the EU to take urgent action because we are terrified of
the consequences of Brazilian deforestation, both locally and
globally.
We beg the EU to stand up for its citizens' values and our shared
future by making sure trade with Brazil protects, rather than
destroys, the natural world on which we all depend.
NOTE:
Visit
EUBrazilTrade.org for more
information - including a list of parliamentary members standing in
the European election who support this initiative.
Register to vote in the EU
elections
here.
Additional Information
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