Both ENDS

News / 24 september 2024

Massive Wildfires Ravage South America

“The fires have reached proportions we have never experienced before.”

Large swathes of South America are currently draped in smoke. From Buenos Aires, to São Paulo to Asunción people struggle to breathe due to unprecedented fires raging on the continent, fuelled by extreme drought, the expansion of the agriculture frontier and rising temperatures linked to climate change.

Both ENDS and its local partners on the continent have been working on the protection of ecosystems for many years. The communities we have supported for years, have lost everything: their crops, pastures and forests.

For example at the Paraguay/Parana basin, as part of the Wetlands without Borders network. Faced with the current unprecedented crisis, the partners are now calling for more attention to this man-made catastrophe and urge the global community to do more to help the local communities fight the fires, access to emergency aid and eventually help with the urgently needed restoration of burnt areas. They are also seeking support in their struggle stop the rapacious expansion of the agricultural frontiers – which is at the heart of many of the current fires. Most of the blazes are caused by deforestation and illegal land-clearing for monoculture crops like soy or cattle ranging.

This year’s fire season has been ongoing for months already and as September 2024 unfolds, the wildfires continue to wreak unseen havoc, causing irreversible environmental damage and raising alarms about the future of South America's delicate ecosystems. Due to lack of rainfall further North in the Amazon, this year, the entire Paraná/Paraguay river basin is experiencing one of its worst droughts ever, with the mighty river system nearly running dry in some areas, leaving the surrounding forest and wetlands at the mercy of the fires with catastrophic consequences.

9% of Bolivia’s total area on fire

In Bolivia, vast tracts of forest are burning in the Chiquitania region and the eastern lowlands.

The NASA Earth Observatory reports: By September 6th, blazes tore through more than 10 million hectares of Bolivia, or roughly 9 percent of the country’s total area. Out of the 42 million metric tons of carbon emitted in Bolivia between May and August, 33 million metric tons came from fires in the state of Santa Cruz.”

Sara Crespo, from Santa Cruz-based organisation Probioma reports: “This year, we are experiencing a terrible socio-environmental catastrophe. [Besides the loss of precious ecosystems...] homes of many of the indigenous communities have been burned meaning hundreds of families losing their entire livelihoods. The fires consumed their seeds, their crops and their production areas. Meanwhile the cities have been submerged by smoke with it’s smell of death and the entire population is being exposed to this putrid air - with nobody taking responsibility to address the causes. Those who lost everything will now depend on emergency aid, both to face the immediate crisis of smoke and fire, as well as in coming months when they need to rebuild their productive systems and restore the natural habitats they depend on.”

A 2100% rise in wildfires in one year in Brazil

Also the Pantanal, the world's largest tropical wetland, shared between Brazil, Bolivia, and Paraguay, is suffering like never before. The Brazilian Pantanal has seen a 2100% rise in fires compared to the 2023 season. So far the wildfires in the Pantanal have burned over 1.22 million hectares already, devastating wildlife habitats. The biodiversity-rich wetlands, home to a unique set of flora and fauna such as jaguars, anteaters, caymans, birds, and other endangered species, are being devastated.

Solange Ikeda of Instituto Gaia in Caceres, Brazil shares: “Here in the Pantanal and Cerrado, the fires have reached proportions we have never experienced before. It is sad to see so much biodiversity lost... animals, plants and, worse still, the homes of riverside communities have been consumed by fire [including] their livestock and subsistence farming areas. We unfortunately have all the conditions for fires to occur, having lost a large part of the wetland in recent years and the extreme drought and above-normal temperatures. [The fires] were almost 100% caused by human action, and not by small subsistance farmers (as is often reported), but by the large landowners. This year my own family ended up spending almost 15 days facing the fire that reached our farm. [Members of the family] had to join the community brigades to try to save the area of ​​forest with our own hands.”

The fires are not caused by small subsistance farmers,

but by the large landowners

Joao Andrade of the collective PesquisAcao highlights “the role of the State is to make resources available, but it also has the responsibility to react by holding those who light fires (for land clearance) during the prohibition period accountable for environmental crimes, challenging the current impunity before the law. Which a democratic state governed by the rule of law, as Brazil proposes to be, should not allow.”

Closure of schools in Paraguay

Further to the East, Paraguay has been severely affected by the wildfires. The flames have engulfed vast areas of the country's forests and grasslands. The smoke from the fires is also here affecting air quality in urban areas, to the point that health concerns are forcing the closure of schools in the country.

Hugo Olmedo, Coordinator of CODES, Paraguay: “The communities have lost everything, their crops, pastures and forests. The people we support for years in the production of organic honey have now lost their beehives and the flowers necessary for future honey production. The current conditions of a combination of forest fires, drought, low river levels and polluted air that makes it difficult to breathe, mean that today all we can do is to ask for help from the outside to overcome this situation – one that was clearly caused by the hand of man.”

Argentina covered in smoke

And even much further South, along the Parguay/Paraná river the consequences are dire. The river which is one of the main shipping and transport ways becoming unnavigable due to unprecedented low water flows and with fires affecting areas which normally should be largely submerged wetlands.

Valerica Enderle from CAUCE in Paraná, Entre Rios province : “This whole situation makes us so sad and has us worried. The soil is losing life, the fauna has no more food or shelter, it is burned to death, the trees and grasslands burn, and those ashes that fall in our gardens are now reaching our lungs. We cannot continue to support this extractive, predatory model, we have to stop!”

Experts warn that without significant policy changes and global cooperation,

the destruction of these critical ecosystems will continue to accelerate year

on year.

Call for global cooperation

Environmentalists from the local organisations are sounding the alarm, linking the frequency and intensity of these fires to climate change and poor land management policies. Despite ongoing firefighting efforts, the experts warn that without significant policy changes and global cooperation, the destruction of these critical ecosystems will continue to accelerate year on year. The local organisations at the forefront of this fight for one of the world’s most precious ecosystems are in desperate need of greater solidarity and financial support. Despite the environmental devastation of epic proportions, the region is no longer on the radar of a lot of donor and philanthropists. This lack of attention is leaving the local environmentalists feel like they are being left behind, facing one of the world’s most extreme climate battles on their own. They are therefore reaching out to the global community with an appeal for more attention to their struggles and an increase of financial resources for the restoration efforts which will be needed for the future.

 

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