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August 24, 2019

A Silent Ecocide

Often referred to as Earth’s 'lung' because of its large swathe of forests releasing oxygen and storing carbon dioxide, the Amazon plays an instrumental role in processes that make our planet fit to live in.

The vastness and richness of the Amazon forest is such that a new species is discovered there every two or three days. Amazon expert and leading ecologist Thomas Lovejoy says, ‘every species in this incredibly biodiverse system represents solutions to a set of biological challenges — any one of which has transformative potential and could generate global human benefits. This rich wealth of species brims with promise, awaiting discovery.’

A forest fire in Para, Brazil | Photo courtesy: Victor Moriyama/AFP - Getty Images
The ongoing fires in the Amazon have provoked uproar among global leaders, celebrities, and social media users worldwide (#PrayForAmazonas has been one of the top trending topics on Twitter in recent days, as images of the fires spread across the internet). French President Emmanuel Macron has described the fires as ‘a real ecocide that is developing everywhere in the Amazon and not only in Brazil’.

The ravaging of Amazonia by fires or other forms of deforestation is not a new phenomenon. According to an estimate by the World Wildlife Fund, humans have cut down seventeen per cent of the Amazon forest cover over the last fifty years. Data released by from Brazilian satellites indicate that about three football fields' worth of Amazonian trees are falling every minute.

Debating whether the Amazon fires are a political problem or an environmental one will not help remedy the issue. According to reports, once lost, it will take around ten million years to replenish Amazon forest (the timeline is thirty-three times longer than humans, as a species, existed.

Deforestation and other environmental disasters are ecocides that are developing not just in the Amazon but in all other parts of the world. According to a report from the University of Maryland, the world in 2018 lost about thirty million acres of tree cover, including around nine million acres of rain forest, an area bigger than the size of Belgium. 

While identifying and acknowledging deforestation as a global problem by leaders, activists and the public has been easy, the tougher challenge is to implement the changes needed to rein it in, and that includes good governance, active participation of local populations and NGOs, and, most importantly, finding ways to prevent pervasive industrial deforestation.