Brazil grants permit to pave highway through heart of Amazon forest


FE Team | Published: July 29, 2022 10:34:32 | Updated: July 31, 2022 09:59:02


An aerial view of the road BR-319 highway near city of Humaita, Amazonas state, Brazil on August 22, 2019 — Reuters/Files

Brazil's environmental authority on Thursday granted an initial permit that will allow a major highway to be paved through the center of the Amazon rainforest, the minister of infrastructure said, in a move that threatens to increase deforestation.

Right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro on the campaign trail had pledged to repave the road, called BR-319, that would connect the largest Amazon city of Manaus year-round to the rest of Brazil, reports Reuters.

The road was originally constructed by Brazil's military dictatorship in the 1970s but rapidly fell into disrepair in the harsh conditions of the rainforest. Much of the route is an impassable stretch of mud during the roughly 6-month rainy season.

Paving the road would allow illegal loggers and land grabbers to more easily access remote and relatively untouched areas of the forest, environmental experts said. A study estimated the project would result in a fivefold rise in deforestation by 2030, the equivalent of an area larger than the US state of Florida.

Bolsonaro's weakening of environmental protections has already spurred soaring deforestation, with clearances of the Brazilian Amazon hitting a 15-year high in 2021.

Infrastructure Minister Marcelo Sampaio announced the permit on Twitter, posting an image of the license from environmental agency Ibama. The agency did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

"In an alignment of engineering and respect for the environment, we are going to take the society of Amazonas state out of isolation," he wrote.

Sampaio did not immediately respond to a question about environmental concerns.

The initial license will allow the government to contract companies to pave the largest middle section of the road that is in worst condition. Contractors will draw up plans but would need another permit in order to begin construction.

This first license would stipulate many conditions in the plans that must be met to start construction, said Marco Aurelio Lessa Villela, a former environmental analyst at Ibama.

"There must be an enormous list of things ... that would be necessary for a road in that place not to be a tragedy, Villela said.

Still, an initial license means there is a good chance the road could move forward, he said.

Bolsonaro celebrated the license in his weekly live internet address.

"I hope soon there's one more license on the way and our (Transportation Department) can start bidding and work for paving BR-319," the president said.

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