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Heat and drought are fueling Brazil's 'fires pandemic'

August 30, 2024

Brazil is in the thick of a destructive fire season. How are deforestation and climate change making the situation worse?

https://p.dw.com/p/4k5Ez
Smoke rises from a forest on fire in Brazil
Brazil's Supreme Court has said the country is witnessing a 'fire pandemic'Image: Eraldo Peres/AP/picture alliance

A megadrought is gripping Brazil, drying out rivers and turning forests into tinderboxes. Almost 60% of the country has been affected. 

"This is the first time that a drought has covered all the way from the north to the country's southeast," Ana Paula Cunha, a researcher at the National Center for Monitoring and Early Warning of Natural Disasters, said in a statement to The Associated Press. "It is the most intense and widespread drought in history."

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva visited riverside communities struggling with low water levels in the Amazon rainforest on Tuesday. 

In these remote areas, rivers are vital for navigation. When they dry up, that threatens the supply of basic goods like food and water. 

A man watches a fire in a sugar cane plantation near Dumon city, Brazil
Recent fires in Sao Paulo state have destroyed thousands of hectares of sugar cane fields, one of the country's top exportsImage: JOEL SILVA/REUTERS

On top of that, more than 20,000 wildfires have raged across the Amazon in the first two weeks of September, prompting Brazil’s supreme court to order government action. 

"We take the need to combat drought, deforestation, fires, very seriously," Lula said in the northern state of Amazonas.

He announced a new authority that will focus on extreme climate risks and propose ways the federal government can respond more quickly to extreme weather events. 

"We need to focus on adaptation and preparedness for these phenomena," said Lula. 

Perfect storm of heat, wind and low humidity 

Much further south, about 1,000 fires have ripped through Brazil's southern Sao Paulo state this month. More than 40 communities were on high alert, with the state capital and other cities shrouded in heavy, gray smoke.

In early September, authorities said more than 59,000 hectares (some 146,000 acres) had already been destroyed by the flames, an area about the size of Chicago. This included vast swaths of sugar cane fields, one of the country's top exports.

A drone view shows heavy smoke from fires at the vegetation in Ribeirao Preto, Brazil
The fires started attracting major media attention when smoke began drifting over big cities like Sao Paulo and Ribeirao Preto, aboveImage: JOEL SILVA/REUTERS

Federal police suspect arson is to blame for the fires, which started in different locations at the same time and spread rapidly through tinder-dry vegetation in a region that hasn't seen rain for months.

"We had an explosive combination of three factors: high temperature, very strong winds and very low relative humidity in the last few days," said Sao Paulo Governor Tarcisio de Freitas on August 27.

Extreme heat, drought fueling fires

The dry period in Brazil usually lasts from August to October. But climate experts with the World Weather Attribution, a group of scientists investigating the effects of climate change on extreme weather, said this past June was the country's "driest, hottest, and windiest" month since records began in 1979.

Those conditions have seen Sao Paulo state and the Amazon rainforest, further north, suffering the worst fire season in decades. More than 3,480 separate fires were recorded in Sao Paulo in August, double the number in all of 2023. And in the first six months of 2024, the Amazon has had the highest number of fire outbreaks in the last 20 years.

These same extreme conditions have also fueled the record fires in the Cerrado Plateau, a tropical savanna, and the Pantanal, the world's largest tropical wetland, a biodiverse area packed full of different species of plants and animals. The Pantanal, located between the Amazon and Sao Paulo, lost some 600,000 hectares to the flames in June, an area the size of Luxembourg.

About 20% of Amazon rainforest already gone

In a report in early August, WWA said the Pantanal fires had been "40% more intense due to climate change." The data backs this up — yearly rainfall in the wetlands has steadily decreased for more than 40 years.

"These mega droughts are becoming more frequent and more severe," said Carlos Peres, a Brazilian conservation ecology expert at the University of East Anglia, in the UK, adding that some three-fifths of Brazil is becoming increasingly dry.

Using satellite image analysis, Brazilian environmental institute MapBiomas revealed in June that the Amazon and Pantanal regions were "facing a serious reduction in water." The Amazon rainforest experienced a historic drought from June to November 2023, driven by low rainfall and consistent high temperatures. But the Pantanal biome dried up the most in 2023, recording a 61% decrease compared to the 1985 historical average.

Peres grew up as the son of a cattle rancher in Para state in the 1960s and '70s, on the eastern edge of the Amazon rainforest. Over his lifetime, he has seen the Amazon shrink by around 20%. And with that forest loss, some of what remains is increasingly going up in flames.

"Until about 25 years ago, forests in the Amazon, even if they sat on sandy soils and seasonally dry areas, they would not burn unless there had been some kind of human disturbance like timber extraction," said Peres. "But that has changed."

Drought, fire destroy Pantanal wetlands

He said consecutive droughts and shorter rainy seasons aren't giving the soils enough time to recharge with water, making the vegetation above more vulnerable to fires. Luciana Gatti, who heads a group of investigators at INPE, Brazil's National Institute for Space Research, told DW from Sao Paulo that the problem is only getting worse.

"We are accelerating the climate collapse," said Gatti, stressing that deforestation was doing more to increase temperatures in the Amazon than global climate change. "The forest that remains is no longer the same; it's like the Amazon is sick."

Trees and other plant life act as climate regulators, by absorbing planet-warming carbon dioxide but also by releasing water vapor into the air through a process called evapotranspiration. In Brazil, said Gatti, the water evaporated from the Amazon and Pantanal wetlands act as a "climate buffer," helping to cool the atmosphere. But with increasing forest fires and deforestation, that buffer is weakening.

In a 2021 study published in the journal Nature, Gatti wrote that parts of the southeastern Amazon were even starting to act as a source of CO2, instead of absorbing it as usual. And, she said, while deforestation has decreased somewhat in recent years, forest degradation due to fire and other factors has been getting worse. "And the problem is that each time, the fire is more uncontrolled."

Fire, drought 'more frequent'

"These extreme events are becoming more frequent," said Julia Tavares, a Brazilian plant ecologist and postdoctoral researcher based at Sweden's Uppsala University. In a 2023 study, she and fellow researchers investigated how different parts of the rainforest were responding to the warmer, drier conditions, and found that parts of the Amazon rainforest were becoming increasingly stressed.

The World Resources Institute reports that wildfires around the world are getting worse, destroying twice as many trees as they were 20 years ago. And a 2022 report from the UN Environment Program predicted extreme fires were set to increase 30% by 2050.

Tavares said, however, that the changing climate wasn't directly sparking the fires in Brazil, adding that naturally occurring blazes were very rare in a tropical climate.

"It's caused by people, human actions that are enhanced by climate change because then you have better conditions for the fire to be spread," she said. She highlighted the huge plots of land, often cleared by ranchers and farmers setting fires using a technique known as slash-and-burn agriculture which are constantly nibbling away at the untouched rainforest.

"Things are changing very rapidly," said Peres, outlining how increased fires and drought were putting water and food security at risk, wiping out biodiversity and harming human health.

He pointed out that every time a forest burns, it sets the stage for "more frequent and more intensive fires the next time," as more of the vegetation dies and becomes fuel for the next wildfire.

"By the time that forest burns the third time, then you no longer have a forest," said Peres. "And the damage that this is doing, both in terms of biodiversity loss and loss in carbon storage, is massive."

Edited by: Jennifer Collins

This article was originally published on August 31, and has been updated to reflect the ongoing fires.

Martin Kuebler Senior editor and reporter living in Brussels, with a focus on environmental issues