The end of the Amazon Updated for 2024

Updated: 24/11/2024

We’re all staring down the barrel of a gun — and Brazil’s hand is on the trigger.

On 8 October, Brazil’s right-wing presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro received 46 percent of the country’s votes. Not enough for an outright win, but enough to make him the clear favourite for the second round on 28 October 28.

Much has been made — and rightly so — of Bolsonaro’s sexism, racism and homophobia. This is a man who said he wouldn’t rape a particular member of Congress because she is “ugly” and “not [his] type”. He would “prefer [his] son to die in an accident than show up with a man.” He has reportedly described black activists as “animals” who should “go back to the zoo.” He is also pro-torture.

Human rights

The media have said less of his equally shocking plans for the environment, which is surprising given that the majority of the Amazon rainforest falls within its borders. Added to that, Brazil has sixth largest greenhouse gas emissions in the world, and wields environmental decision-making power that ricochets around the world. 

So here it is. First off, Bolsonaro plans to open up the Amazon for agriculture and mining. According to him, there will “not be an inch demarcated for indigenous reservation or quilombola. The minorities [should] either adapt or simply vanish.”

Not only is this a grave attack on the human rights of Brazil’s indigenous groups, but also on their ability to continue acting as the best defenders of the world’s forests. We need all the forest we can get, to capture carbon from the atmosphere and keep it locked away. In fact, scientists agree that halting deforestation is just as urgent as reducing emissions.

Bolsonaro’s approach is best summed up by his intent to undermine Brazil’s Ministry of Environment by proposing a merger with the Ministry of Agriculture. 

Environment Minister Edson Duarte said: “It is the same as a ruler saying he will remove the police from the streets. The increase in deforestation will be immediate. I am afraid of a gold rush to see who arrives first. They will know that, if they occupy illegally, the authorities will be complacent. They will be certain that nobody will bother them”.

Global community 

In light of this week’s IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) report, threats to forested land are all the more worrying.

Limiting warming to a challenging 1.5°C — instead of the existing goal of 2°C — will save 10.4 million people from severe flooding, allow 10 percent of coral reefs to survive, and leave half as many people without drinking water. Current policies will take us above 3°C; Bolsonaro’s would take us higher.

And it goes without saying that Bolsonaro will follow in the footsteps of his apparent role model, Donald Trump, and whip Brazil out of the Paris Climate Agreement faster than you can say “it’s cold today, perhaps we could use a little bit of that good old global warming”.

A Bolsonaro-led Brazil will change everything. Not just the lives of Brazilian citizens, but our chances, as a global community, of maintaining a liveable planet beyond 2030.

So put 28 October in your diary: that’s when Brazil will decide for us all. 

This Author 

Becca Warner is a freelance journalist and copywriter, focusing on environmentalism and the future. She writes regularly for Atlas of the Future and for sustainability projects at Futerra. She has also written about environmental justice for charities If Not Us Then Who and Size of Wales.

This article was first published on Rantt Media

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