Environment & Energy
Related: About this forum2.5 Million Acres Of Bolivia Have Already Burned In 2019, Pushed By Pro-Big Ag Policies
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On July 9, President Evo Morales approved the amendment of Supreme Decree 26075 to expand land demarcated for livestock production and the agribusiness sector to include Permanent Forest Production Lands in the regions of Beni and Santa Cruz. The decree authorizes the clearing of forest for agricultural activities in private- and community-held areas under a system of sustainable management. According to current regulations, this system allows controlled burning.
We have the duty and mission to boost Bolivias economic growth, not only based on non-renewable natural resources but also based on agriculture, Morales said. He added via Twitter that the government is planning on expanding agricultural production and infrastructure to boost beef exports to China.
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Bolivia is no stranger to fire and deforestation. According to numbers from the University of Maryland (UMD), which has been collating satellite data on the worlds forests since the beginning of the century, the country lost 7.5 percent of its tree cover between 2001 and 2018. The record-holding year during this period was 2016, when around 471,000 hectares (1.16 million acres) of tree cover were lost. But preliminary data for 2019 indicate this year could dramatically unseat 2016. According to the Forest and Land Audit and Social Control Authority (ABT), fires have consumed more than 953,000 hectares (2.35 million acres) of Bolivian forest so far. If these data hold true, this means that deforestation in 2019 will be more than double that of 2016 and more than three times the 300,000 hectares (741,000 acres) lost in 2018.
The lions share of Bolivias deforestation is happening in the Santa Cruz region, which comprises vast tracts of both the rainforest of the Amazon and the dry forests of the Gran Chaco. Satellite data show that Santa Cruz lost a full 10 percent of its tree cover in less than two decades. Here, too, preliminary numbers from UMD indicate 2019 may be a banner year for forest loss, with tree cover loss alerts spiking in late August to levels more than double the average of previous years. Most of these alerts are occurring in areas with high fire activity, according to data from NASA that show Santa Cruz fire activity in August was around three times higher than in years past. If we take 2012 as the base year, when 128,043 hectares [316,401 acres] were deforested [in Santa Cruz], this years deforestation would be more than seven times greater; and if we take only the deforestation of Chiquitania, it would be three times greater, said Pablo Solón, former Bolivian ambassador to the U.N.
Satellite data show fire activity is still heavy around Roboré, but is intensifying in the northern and western portions of the Santa Cruz region. Source: NASA FIRMS. VIIRS Active Fires. Accessed through Global Forest Watch on Aug. 6, 2019.
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https://news.mongabay.com/2019/09/disaster-strikes-in-bolivia-as-fires-devastate-unique-forests/
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