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Roads to Disaster

by Dharmendra Kapri | 15-08-2015 21:46 recommendations 0

Roads open up the rainforest. They allow people who otherwise would not be able to make their way through the impenetrable forest to get into remote anpreviously inaccessible areas very easily. The roads are built for various industries, including logging, mining, oil and gas extraction, but soon they are used by others too: people, who have perhaps been displaced by farms or war and who find the roads are an easy route to new land that they can use to set up smallholdings.


The Trans Amazonian Highway in northern Brazil was built in the 1970s. It stretches some 2,000 miles across the Amazon rainforest from east to west. The Brazilian government?s plan was to create settlements in previously unused areas. They offered settlers 250 acre plots, 6 months salary and easy access to agricultural loans, but the project ended up costing $65,000 per family settled. As the forest soils were so unstable and easily eroded, the road was often impassable, while harvests failed and the fragile topsoil was washed away.


Trans Amazonian Highway


In more recent times, plans have been drawn up to improve another road through the Brazilian Amazon, the BR-163, which stretches for 1,100 miles from Cuiaba, near the Bolivian border to Santarem on the banks of the Amazon. Around 600 miles of it is still dirt track, but the Brazilian government plans to pave all of it and this is a real cause for concern for environmentalists.


The first 450 miles of the BR-163 are already properly surfaced. Either side of it, what was once untouched forest is now rolling fields. The main crop being grown is soya, half of which is exported to countries in the European Union. Much of that soya is used for cattle feed, which is worrying, as it means eating British or European meat may in some cases be indirectly damaging the rainforest. The soya crop is the main reason for paving the rest of the BR-163. Santarem has a deep water port, and a fully-paved BR163 would shorten the journey of the soya crop by 600 miles over land and by a similar distance by sea, saving on transport costs and increasing profits for the producers.


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Many people follow roads into areas of rainforest already damaged by industries like logging, mining and searching for oil.! The Brazilian government used the slogan ?Land without men for men without land? to encourage landless peasants to set up farmsteads in former rainforest that had been cleared as a result of logging operations. !


Using a technique called ?slash and burn?, these small farmers clear an area of forest by cutting down the big trees and setting fire to the rest.! They grow crops on a small scale in the forest, but the soil does not remain fertile for long, so they are forced to move on.! Shifting cultivation is thought to be responsible for up to 60% of tropical forest loss.! In the Brazilian Amazon alone, around 500,000 small farmers are responsible for clearing an estimated one hectare each per year!


 
slash and burn

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  • Dormant user Dharmendra Kapri
 
 
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7 Comments

  • says :
    A great article to read. But yes, care should be taken before taking any action regarding such issues. Bidiversity should not be destroyed for the sake of economy.
    Posted 18-08-2015 10:21

  • Luiz Bispo says :
    Dharmendra, in fact people are destroying the forest but recently deforestation is getting view on politics and economical projects which is quite good. However, there is a LOT to do and we are far away from the goal. sustainable development. Hopefully, someday everything will be very "green". =)
    Posted 18-08-2015 03:32

  • says :
    Rainforests are a home to numerous species of flora and fauna.Thanks for adding to my knowledge by informing about various aspects of rainforest destruction.There should be some check on this destruction and there should be some limit to shifting cultivation as well.
    Posted 17-08-2015 20:11

  • Arushi Madan says :
    Thanks for an informatiive report showing different angles and causes of rainforest destruction.These practices are certainly not sustainable. Rainforests are critically important ecosystems and must be preserved for our well being.
    Posted 16-08-2015 04:53

  • Rohan Kapur says :
    Well shared Dharmendra. The report about persistent destruction of Braziallian Rain forest is quite worrying. Farmers & authorities both are party to this.
    Can not really blame poor farmers as they have no alternative but here on a larger scale the authorities must take concrete steps to stop this.
    Forests are our lifelines.
    Posted 16-08-2015 01:55

  • says :
    Thanks for sharing Dharmendra. These farmers must be offered a sustainable alternative. The Braziallian rain forest must be preserved.
    Posted 16-08-2015 01:39

  • says :
    Dear Dharmendra, it is disheartening to see farmers clearing forest area for different purposes. Roads are mainly constructed for ease of the people and connect several destinations, while economy is important but care should be taken for the consequences. Rainforests are rich source for biodiversity and care should be taken that the use should be rational.
    Thank you for sharing about the Brazilian rainforest and associated roads dear Dharmendra!
    Posted 16-08-2015 00:28

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