Brazilian Amazon Fires Consumed Area The Size Of Wales In 2020; Paris, Deforestation Targets Dead
It was another intense year for fires in the Amazon. More than 2,500 major blazes burned across Brazils Legal Amazon between May 28 and November 3, according to a fire season summary released via the Amazon Conservation Associations Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project (MAAP). 2020 was also the most active fire year in the southern Amazon since 2012 all along the regions so-called Amazon Arc of Deforestation, according to NASA.
The majority (90%) of the major fires this year detected by MAAP occurred in the Brazilian Amazon. Here, fires arent natural but are mostly ignited by humans on deforested lands to clear existing agricultural fields of pests and weeds, or, of far greater concern, as a way for land grabbers to convert forested conserved public lands into private agricultural lands. In 2019, say analysts, most Amazon fires followed a pattern of intentional, often illegal, deforestation to make way for cattle and crops. However, this year a startling number of major fires (41%) burned in standing Amazon rainforest, where fires were not historically naturally occurring.
For fire to burn inside the rainforest, it must be a particularly dry year now likely the result of climate change with human ignition sources typically on neighboring lands. MAAP estimates that nearly 5.4 million acres (2.2 million hectares) of the Brazilian Amazons standing rainforest burned this year, an area roughly the size of the country of Wales in the United Kingdom.
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Of grave concern: According to a new Climate Observatory report, Brazil with its now skyrocketing deforestation rate is no longer on track to meet its 2020 goals under the Paris Climate Agreement, to which Brazil is still a signatory despite Bolsonaros past threats to pull the country out of the accord. Brazils climate pledge (its nationally determined contribution, or NDC), submitted to the UN in the run up to the Paris Climate Summit in 2015, targets a 37% cut in greenhouse gas by 2025 compared to 2005 levels. Brazil also pledged an indicative 2030 target, achieving a 43% reduction in emissions compared to 2005. As part of that agreement, Brazil has a 2020 commitment to reduce deforestation by 80% from 1996-2005 levels, and its Paris Agreement commitments include a target of zero illegal deforestation in Amazonia by 2030. Both of these [targets] are set to be missed, Climate Action Tracker reported.
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https://news.mongabay.com/2020/11/as-2020-amazon-fire-season-winds-down-brazil-carbon-emissions-rise/