New study published in Nature says period was as destructive as record 2016 El Niño drought and heatwave Last modified on Thu 24 Aug 2023 02.30 BST The first half of Jair Bolsonaro’s presidency was so destructive for the Amazon that it was comparable to the record 2016 El Niño drought and heatwave in terms of carbon emissions, according to scientists.
Annual emissions from the world’s largest rainforest roughly doubled in 2019 and 2020, compared with the 2010 to 2018 average, according to a new study published in Nature , as swaths of forest were deliberately cleared and burned for cattle ranching and farming during the first two years of the far-right leader’s time in office.
While the amount of carbon that the Amazon absorbs and emits changes with weather cycles, generally sucking in more in wet years and less in dry periods, the study found that the rise in emissions under Bolsonaro had little to do with natural processes, but was instead caused by the systematic removal and downgrading of environmental law enforcement in headtopics.com
Brazil . Under Bolsonaro, the number and severity of fines for illegal deforestation by Brazilian authorities fell dramatically while fires and land-clearing soared, the study found. Carbon emissions increased from an annual average of 0.24 gigatonnes from 2010-18 to 0.
Suburbs where house prices doubled in the past decade House prices in nearly one in three Sydney suburbs doubled in the past 10 years, data from CoreLogic shows.
The suburbs where house prices have doubled in the past decade House prices have doubled over the past 10 years in suburbs across Australia.