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Brazil to crack down on Amazon cattle invasion

By MICHAEL ASTOR (Associated Press Writer)

From Associated Press

June 03, 2008 3:13 PM EDT

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - Destruction of the Amazon seems to be on the upswing,

and Brazil's environment minister has wasted no time in aiming at a villain:

Cattle.

 

The minister, Carlos Minc, says Brazil's government will impound cattle caught

grazing on illegally cleared pastures with an operation, dubbed " Rogue Bull, " to

attack deforestation in the rain forest.

 

" The price of meat and soy has skyrocketed and there is a historic relationship

between prices and deforestation, " Minc said as he announced the new measures

late Monday.

 

Officials are going after livestock because ranchers routinely find ways to

avoid fines for illegal logging by felling public forests for gazing land.

 

After three years of decline, Amazon deforestation appears to be on the upswing.

 

Government researchers said Monday that preliminary data indicate the Amazon

lost at least 2,258 square miles (5,850 square kilometers) of forest cover from

August to April 2008. That was up from 1,920 square miles (4,974 square

kilometers) over the same period a year before.

 

The Amazon's 73 million cows outnumber the human population by about three to

one and feeding them is the biggest driver of deforestation.

 

Cattle pasture already covers 7.8 percent of Brazil's 1.6-million-square-mile

(4.1-million-square-kilometer) Amazon region, according to the National

Statistics Institute.

 

Burning to clear new or overgrown pasture in the Amazon region accounts for

about 75 percent of Brazil's total greenhouse gas emissions.

 

On top of that, cows themselves are living greenhouse-gas machines, emitting

methane, one of the gases blamed for global warming.

 

Rogue Bull is the latest in a series of operations to crack down on profits from

illegally cutting the rain forest

 

Brazil's environmental protection agency in May seized 4,300 tons of grain,

mostly soy and corn, grown on illegally deforested land.

 

The government also says it will start denying loans to farmers who have ignored

requirements to leave 80 percent of their forested areas standing.

 

The measures have been opposed by powerful ranchers and farmers in the region,

particularly Blairo Maggi, governor of the Amazon state of Mato Grosso and one

of the world's largest soy producers.

 

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not

be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

What gets us into trouble is not what we don't know, it's what we know for sure

that just ain't so.

- Mark Twain

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