Brazil foreign minister says ‘there is no climate change catastrophe’

  • September 12, 2019

Brazil’s Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo denied on Wednesday that his country was burning down the Amazon rainforest and said unfounded alarm over global climate change was threatening Brazilian sovereignty.

“There is no climate change catastrophe,” Araujo said in a talk at Washington’s Heritage Foundation. “From the debate that is going on it would seem that the world is ending.”

Araujo, who argued that there was a lack of scientific proof over the causes of global warming, said climate change advocates were stirring up alarmism for political ends as part of a leftist conspiracy against the United States and Brazil, whose sovereignty is under attack.

Araujo said Amazon fires were about average this year and deforestation in Brazil was only responsible for 2% of global CO2 emissions. Globally, he added, deforestation was responsible for 11% of total CO2 emissions.

“So even if we assume that CO2 emissions directly control temperature, which the computer models do not show, Brazil is not the culprit,” he said.

Bolsonaro has rejected as foreign interference the international criticism of his handling of the fires and insisted that Brazil will develop the Amazon as it deems fit.

Araujo said Brazil has been painted as “a country that is destroying the planet” and critics are proposing trade sanctions against it and even an “invasion.”

Increasing deforestation in the Amazon rainforest:

There has been a huge spike in deforestation for farm land in the Amazon rainforest since Bolsonaro’s rise to power.

The Brazilian Space Agency has released data documenting a massive spike in deforestation in the Amazon rainforest. Citing figures from June, the agency registered an 88.4% increase over the same month in 2018. The agency measures annual July to July activity – and this year there was an estimated 15% increase in deforestation. That increase translates to some 4,565 square kilometers of lost rainforest over a year.

A recent surge in fires in the Amazon, considered a bulwark against climate change, caused an international outcry and criticism of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro for prioritizing development of the region over protection of the forests.

Meanwhile, Bolsonaro, a long time climate change skeptic maintains ‘climate change’ as ‘dubious’, and has told other nations that ‘what they decide to do with the Amazon is their call’.