Wednesday, August 28, 2019

 

Death Spiral for the Amazon?


The Amazon rainforest is truly a wonder of the natural world. It is so big that it creates its own weather, from winds that affect currents in both oceans to rainfall which gathers and is dropped within its boundaries. It is the world's largest source of fresh water and biodiversity. It is by far the biggest land-based carbon sink. As increasing areas have been cut in recent years, the rainfall has been disrupted. The deforested areas do not produce as much moisture when the air moves over them. At a certain point, this will lead to insufficient replacement of lost trees, and those areas will transition to savanna rather than rainforest.

Now the Amazon is burning, tens of thousands of fires, some of them started by government operatives pouring gasoline from planes, have raged unabated for a month. There have been significant fires due to drought twice before this millennium, but this is far worse. Not only are some of the fires deliberate, the government/farming interests are murdering tribal leaders who are the beating heart of those remnant first peoples who are the frontline in protecting the rainforest. These courageous tribal people, shrunk to tiny bands, are the conscience and very soul of global protection of this precious, critical forest. A thousand miles away, in Sao Paolo at mid-afternoon, the skies are dark, blackened by smoke.

The Economist recently ran a cover article ("Deathwatch for the Amazon"), detailing how close we are to losing this critical resource. It reviews the research and the politics involved in the current resurgence in deforestation, due to non-compliance with laws under Dilma Rouseff and now, collusion between Bolsonaro's right-wing government and the cattle industry. On top of Bolsonaro's blatant invitation to loggers and refusal to enforce existing laws to protect the Amazon, these fires are the worst threat yet to the biggest carbon sink on Earth outside the oceans. the pace of Amazon deforestaion, which has almost doubled since Bolsonaro's election, represents an existential threat to life as we know it.

As soon as I read the Economist article and absorbed the news about the fires, I remembered the chapter in Mark Lynas' gripping "Six Degrees" detailing the death of the Amazon. "Three Degrees" (chapters detail what the world looks like with each degree C increase in average temperature) is the point where the earth system goes into multiple runaway feedback loops. It is the point of no return, insuring at least the 6 degrees warming in the book's title. I did not have the heart to read Lynas any further after that chapter.

Lynas summarized then-current climate science to predict such a threshold by 2050, but, reading the Economist cover,  I immediately knew that the earth system was right on the brink of catastrophic disequilibrium. Correct, we are nowhere near three degrees C of warming. We are closing in on 1.5, with another one degree already pumped into the carbon cycle, and protected a degree by industrial atmospheric sulfites, which will rapidly disappear once global heavy industry ceases. Once again, we are reaching a threshold frighteningly early.

As Lynas details, a study in 2000 by the Hadley Centre reckoned that the limit beyond which the Amazon could not recover was 40% deforestation. However, the Economist article cites a 2018 study by M. Nobre and Thomas Lovejoy of George Mason University which has revised that figure to 20-25%, which would throw the whole vast region irrevocably towards savanna, eventually worse. Their study takes into account climate change and fire, as well as deforestation itself. The level of rainforest destruction currently stands at 17%, perilously close to the threshold. These fires, on top of the huge increase in deforestation, put the final slide squarely within Bolsonaro's tenure, a chilling thought.

I write at the close of the G-7 summit, at which Emmanuel Macron dramatically called for the rich nations to stand up to Brazil (by toughening their trade stance with Brazil under the Mercosur agreement). Bolsonaro criticized the stance, saying it was yet another colonialist ploy, and refused the $20 million offered to help fight the fires. But crucially, he also seemed to bow to the pressure, calling in the Brazilian military to take on the task.

Before this latest response, I was feeling incredibly helpless, imagining an armada of water tankers sweeping into the Amazon with a fighter jet escort, supported by world powers. Today I learned that Brazil has agreed to accept the G7 money, which is a tiny step towards achieving a complex "Climate New World Order," which I will discuss in the next post on possible solutions to the current mess. The deforestation and subsequent burning to clear new fields to pasture cows serves to feed North American burger hunger. This is about opening rainforest to farming, rather than something like California wildfires, which are much harder to contain. The fires themselves have been overdramatized, it appears. But the drama is necessary to awaken the world from its torpor with respect to climate disruption and the crucial role rainforests play in it. What should an awakened world do now?



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