Amazon rainforest sees worst August fires in over a decade


FE Team | Published: August 31, 2022 17:57:03 | Updated: September 03, 2022 21:00:11


Smoke from a fire rises into the air as trees burn amongst vegetation in Brazil's Amazon rainforest, in Apui, Amazonas state, Brazil, September 5, 2021. Picture taken with a drone September 5, 2021. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly

Fires in Brazil's Amazon rainforest surged in August to the highest for the month since 2010, government data showed on Wednesday, surpassing the blazes in August 2019 that drew global attention soon after President Jair Bolsonaro took office.

National space research agency INPE registered 31,513 fire alerts in the Amazon via satellite in the first 30 days of the month, making it the worst August since 2010, when fires totalled 45,018 for the full month, reports Reuters. 

Most of INPE's Amazon fire alerts in an average year come in August and September – considered the burning season in the region, when rains often subside to let ranchers and farmers often set fire to deforested areas. 

With one day left, fires this month are already up 12.3 per cent from August 2021 and roughly 20 per cent above the average for the month in the INPE data series since 1998.

The uptick comes ahead of an October presidential election with leading candidates sharply at odds over destruction of the Amazon rainforest.

The frontrunner, leftist former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, has vowed tougher protection of the Amazon and blasted right-wing incumbent Jair Bolsonaro for letting deforestation of the biome hit a 15-year high. read more

Experts blame Bolsonaro for rolling back environmental protections in Brazil, opening the way for loggers and ranchers to illegally clear more of the Amazon since he took office in 2019.

Bolsonaro's office and the Environment Ministry did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.

Preliminary data showed that deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon in the first seven months of this year totalled an area roughly seven times the size of New York City – the most for the period in at least six years.

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