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Friday, September 20, 2024

Firefighters battle fiery flames around Brasilia

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BRASILIA, Brazil—Brazilian firefighters on Monday (Tuesday Manila time) battled flames blazing through a nature reserve in the capital district of Brasilia, where an area the size of 3,000 football fields has already been destroyed.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva called an emergency meeting of his Cabinet as Brazil’s worst drought in seven decades has fueled fires in the Amazon rainforest and the Pantanal wetlands, choking major cities including Rio de Janeiro with smoke.

The capital Brasilia was the latest to be hit, battling its worst fire of the year as residents used buckets of water to dampen their threatened homes.

Three separate fires broke out over the weekend in the Brasilia National Park, officials said, razing about 1,200 hectares by Monday as dozens of firefighters with planes and helicopters battled to contain the onslaught.

“The flames began to come with great speed and at a height of about six meters, and the community started to mobilize,” nurse Simone Costa, 51, told AFP as she inspected fire damage with her husband and daughter near their home in Brasilia.

“We grabbed buckets of water to control the fire so that it did not move even closer,” she said.

Authorities warned that things were likely to get worse in ultra-dry conditions after 140 days without rain in Brasilia.

The number of fires in Brazil so far this month (57,312) has already exceeded the total for Sept. 2023 in its entirety, according to satellite data from the INPE research institute.

Several Brazilian dams are at historically low levels, and cities like Rio are affected by water restrictions.

Though fuelled by drought, which experts say is made more likely by climate change, authorities say most of the fires were set illegally.

Meanwhile, sugarcane farmer Marcos Meloni is still haunted by his battle last month to fight the flames on his land, as the double-edged disaster of fires and drought hits Brazil’s agricultural sector hard.

“The rearview mirror of the water tanker shriveled up” from the intense heat, recalled the farmer from Barrinha, at the heart of a major agricultural area 340 kilometers (211 miles) from Sao Paulo.

“I thought I was going to die there.”

Brazil’s worst drought in seven decades has fueled fires across the vast nation in recent weeks, ripping through the Amazon rainforest, leaving jaguars with burn injuries in the Pantanal wetlands, and choking major cities with smoke.

The country’s vital agricultural sector is also reeling, with harvests of sugarcane, arabica coffee, oranges and soybeans — of which Brazil is the world’s main producer and exporter — at risk.

And there is little hope of a quick turnaround, with less rain forecast in October than average.

In the country’s main sugar-producing region in the state of Sao Paulo, some 230,000 hectares of the four million sugarcane plantations in the area, have been affected to varying degrees by the fires.

Half of the damaged plantations have yet to be harvested, according to the Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Union.

“Where the sugarcane is still standing, we expect the yield (in sugar) to drop by half,” said Jose Guilherme Nogueira, CEO of the Organization of Sugarcane Producers’ Associations of Brazil.

Meloni had already finished his harvest but his land suffered significant damage.

“It burned where there were shoots, which were already struggling to come out because of the lack of water. Now we have to see where we will have to replant.”

In southeastern Minas Gerais, home to 70 percent of Brazilian Arabica, coffee growers are also anxiously awaiting the rains needed to encourage their shrubs to flower and form the coffee berries that will be picked next year.

“The soil lacks water. It is the worst water deficit in 40 years,” lamented Jose Marcos Magalhaes, president of Minasul, the second-largest coffee cooperative in the country.

By the end of the month, “we need rains of good intensity to hope to have a normal harvest” in 2025, he said.

Bad weather has already disrupted the 2023-2024 harvest, which is coming to an end.

In May, the state-run National Supply Company (Conab), a public body, anticipated an increase of 8.2 percent in Arabica production, but these forecasts “will probably be revised downwards,” said Renato Ribeiro, from the Center for Advanced Studies in Applied Economics at the University of Sao Paulo.

The drought is also squeezing orange farmers, whose fruit are mainly destined for the juice industry.

Brazilian citrus producers’ association Fundecitrus expects a nearly 30 percent decline in production, exacerbated by a bacterial disease plaguing the country’s oranges.

Conab expects soybean production to fall 4.7 percent as a result of last year’s drought and massive flooding in April and May in the southern Rio Grande do Sul state.

This year’s drought has delayed planting for the next harvest.

“If the weather improves, soybean producers can make up for this delay,” said Luiz Fernando Gutierrez, an analyst at the Safras e Mercado firm.

“But if the drought continues into October, there could be harvest problems” in 2025.

Brazil’s agricultural industry is the worst affected by climate change, but also bears some responsibility for its woes, said climatologist Carlos Nobre.

“This is the sector that emits the most greenhouse gases in Brazil. It must reduce them and put an end to deforestation. It must open its eyes.”

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