Bolsonaro, Facing Blame for Surge in Amazon Deforestation, Says Destruction Won't End Because "It's Cultural"

Right-wing Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro drew worldwide rebuke Wednesday after saying Amazon deforestation and fires would not end because “it’s cultural.”

Marcio Astrini, public policy coordinator at Greenpeace Brazil, told the Washington Post that “the only cultural aspect of deforestation in the Amazon is the culture of forest crime, which the government does not seem to want to confront.”

Bolsonaro’s comments to reporters in the capital of Brasília came two days after data released by the Brazilian government showed that Amazon deforestation hit its highest level in over a decade. The Brazilian Space Research Institute (INPE) said Monday that deforestation wiped out 3,769 square miles (9,762 square kilometers) over the 12-month period ending July 30, 2019—the highest rate of deforestation since 2008.

That forest loss represents a nearly 30 percent spike from the year before.

The figures, said Rainforest Foundation Norway secretary-general Øyvind Eggen, confirm “that 2019 has been a dark year for the rainforest in Brazil.”

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT