Friday, April 30, 2010

Amazon ranchers 'pushed into rainforest' by farming

29th April 2010
Source: Cool Earth

Soy farming levels in Brazil is forcing ranchers to move into the Amazon rainforest, it has been claimed.

According to an article on Monga Bay, the expansion of the industrial soy farming industry is adding to deforestation by pushing cattle ranchers further into the rainforest. The site reported that this is the finding of a new study published in the journal Environmental Research Letters.

For the research, scientists looked at census figures taken between 2000 and 2006 on deforestation, livestock populations levels and pasture area sizes to work out which parts of the rainforest are being hit the most by forest clearing.

"Their analysis found that deforestation shifted 39 kilometres to the north-east during the period," the site noted.

Cattle ranches are one of the biggest causes of deforestation in the Amazon rainforest, as is illegal logging and other activity.

Monga Bay pointed out that in the 1990s, soy production in the rainforest went through a boom period.

1 comment:

Blog do Jorge Hipólito said...

The policy in Brazil has always been driven by force of capitalism. The curious thing is that many legislators present themselves as socialists, for example, a parliamentary PCdoB is ahead of a movement that seeks to change the Forest Code. In São Paulo the only possible change would be to include paragraph determining the revitalization of the 20% legal reserve. Imagine the Amazon region. Farmers when pressed by the law seek to change it to not break it and thus does not support the forest devastation.