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Sunday, March 30, 2025

Guyana playing big role in protecting Amazon rainforest

by

1216 days ago
20211129
Guyana has maintained more than 80 percent of its humid forests, according to scientists, compared with less than 50 percent in other South American nations [File: Rustom Seegopaul/Al Jazeera]

Guyana has maintained more than 80 percent of its humid forests, according to scientists, compared with less than 50 percent in other South American nations [File: Rustom Seegopaul/Al Jazeera]

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

 

● Trees cov­er 90 per­cent of land in Guyana, a coun­try ex­perts say can of­fer in­sights in­to pro­tect­ing the world’s largest rain­for­est ●

 

George­town, Guyana — The on­ly Eng­lish-speak­ing na­tion in South Amer­i­ca has one of the con­ti­nent’s best track records for Ama­zon rain­for­est pro­tec­tion—and an ad hoc pa­trol group of In­dige­nous farm­ers, teach­ers, and hunters track­ing log­gers and wild­cat min­ers is part of the rea­son why.

At one point last year, a three-per­son team from the South Rupu­nuni Dis­trict Coun­cil (SRDC), an um­brel­la group of In­dige­nous com­mu­ni­ties, was on a rou­tine jun­gle pa­trol near Guyana’s bor­der with Brazil.

They were ac­cost­ed by a gang of gold min­ers and threat­ened with au­to­mat­ic weapons, said Kid James, pro­gramme co-or­di­na­tor for the SRDC, a Wapichan In­dige­nous coun­cil that ad­min­is­ters con­ser­va­tion ini­tia­tives.

While team mem­bers es­caped the en­counter with­out in­juries, James said the in­ci­dent high­lights the threats con­ser­va­tion­ists can face try­ing to pro­tect the world’s largest rain­for­est. “The min­ing ac­tiv­i­ty was al­most in a wild west state,” James told Al Jazeera.

Af­ter their mem­bers were threat­ened, the SRDC made for­mal com­plaints with Guyana’s min­ing reg­u­la­tors. They re­ceived a se­ri­ous re­sponse. Guyana’s min­is­ter of nat­ur­al re­sources vis­it­ed the area lat­er that year, James said, and the en­su­ing pub­lic pres­sure from au­thor­i­ties and res­i­dents led to a sig­nif­i­cant de­cline in the lev­el of in­for­mal min­ing in the area for about eight months.

Conservation officers working with the South Rupununi District Council (SRDC), an umbrella group of Indigenous communities in southern Guyana, conduct tests on river water in the Amazon rainforest [File: Courtesy SRDC]

Conservation officers working with the South Rupununi District Council (SRDC), an umbrella group of Indigenous communities in southern Guyana, conduct tests on river water in the Amazon rainforest [File: Courtesy SRDC]

Part of the ef­fec­tive­ness of con­ser­va­tion pa­trols by groups like the SRDC is that they can keep a more reg­u­lar pres­ence in re­mote parts of the jun­gle than gov­ern­ment reg­u­la­tors, James said.

The SRDC works with 18 part-time con­ser­va­tion of­fi­cers who know the rur­al ter­rain and can track de­for­esta­tion with cam­eras, GPS tech­nol­o­gy, drones and satel­lite phones. They make reg­u­lar pa­trols on mo­tor­bikes, boats, and even on foot, and re­lay their find­ings back to po­lice and oth­er gov­ern­ment reg­u­la­tors.

“The Wapichan ter­ri­to­ry can still boast a high lev­el of bio­di­ver­si­ty, very pris­tine for­est, clean fresh wa­ter and we want to make sure that is main­tained,” James said. “We have a pro­gramme that’s work­ing, though it’s not per­fect.”

As de­for­esta­tion spikes across much of the Ama­zon, ex­ac­er­bat­ing cli­mate change and hurt­ing bio­di­ver­si­ty, en­vi­ron­men­tal­ists say Guyana of­fers use­ful lessons for pro­tect­ing the world’s largest rain­for­est.

 

High for­est cov­er

 

About 82 per­cent of Guyana’s ter­ri­to­ry is cov­ered by hu­mid for­est, said Liz Gold­man from the World Re­sources In­sti­tute (WRI), a Wash­ing­ton-based track­ing group.

That’s the high­est rate on the con­ti­nent aside from neigh­bour­ing Suri­name and French Guiana, she told Al Jazeera, adding that oth­er Ama­zon na­tions range from 35 to 52 per­cent of land cov­ered by pri­ma­ry for­est.

Mean­while, trees, in gen­er­al, cov­er more than 90 per­cent of Guyana’s ter­ri­to­ry, Gold­man said, and “both pri­ma­ry for­est loss and tree cov­er loss in Guyana is trend­ing down in re­cent years.”

Part of Guyana’s con­ser­va­tion suc­cess comes down to sim­ple de­mo­graph­ics: the coun­try is sparse­ly pop­u­lat­ed and much of its Ama­zon­ian in­te­ri­or is not de­vel­oped.

With few­er than 800,000 res­i­dents, Guyana has about four peo­ple liv­ing on each square kilo­me­tre of land, ac­cord­ing to the World Bank, com­pared with 25 res­i­dents per square kilo­me­tre in neigh­bour­ing Brazil where de­for­esta­tion has spiked.

A local driver stops to examine the dilapidated road in the rainforest in 2017 before he continues driving onwards from Bamboo Creek, a small settlement in the lower foothills of the Pakaraima Mountains of western Guyana [File: Rustom Seegopaul/Al Jazeera]

A local driver stops to examine the dilapidated road in the rainforest in 2017 before he continues driving onwards from Bamboo Creek, a small settlement in the lower foothills of the Pakaraima Mountains of western Guyana [File: Rustom Seegopaul/Al Jazeera]

Once known for suck­ing car­bon diox­ide out of the at­mos­phere, de­for­esta­tion and wild­fires have turned the Brazil­ian Ama­zon in­to a net source for new car­bon emis­sions, ac­cord­ing to a study based on satel­lite da­ta pub­lished in Au­gust from the Mon­i­tor­ing of the An­dean Ama­zon Project (MAAP).

Brazil de­stroyed 13,235 square kilo­me­tres (5,110 square miles) of rain­for­est last year, an area larg­er than Lebanon, ac­cord­ing to of­fi­cial da­ta pub­lished in No­vem­ber.

This has dan­ger­ous im­pli­ca­tions for glob­al cli­mate pat­terns, ac­cord­ing to en­vi­ron­men­tal­ists, though the rest of the Ama­zon out­side of Brazil re­mains a net sink for car­bon diox­ide.

An­oth­er el­e­ment of Guyana’s con­ser­va­tion suc­cess stems from pub­lic buy-in, res­i­dents in the cap­i­tal said. De­spite sharp di­vides along eth­nic and class lines, there seems to be broad con­sen­sus that the coun­try’s iden­ti­ty is tied to its nat­ur­al beau­ty and rain­forests are worth pro­tect­ing, es­pe­cial­ly with an on­slaught of new oil in­vest­ment.

“If we take out all the oil and don’t pre­serve the forests, it won’t be good in 30 years,” said ho­tel porter Nicholas Blair. “It’s a bal­ance.”

That sen­ti­ment is echoed by Sime­on Tay­lor, a se­cu­ri­ty con­trac­tor in the cap­i­tal. “Pro­tect­ing our bio­di­ver­si­ty is cru­cial,” he said, sip­ping a cold beer at a neigh­bour­hood pub on a re­cent week­end.

 

‘Strong ver­i­fi­ca­tion’ for logs

 

Guyana’s government does a good job in making sure illegally deforested trees don’t make their way into the broader supply chain, according to environmentalists [Chris Arsenault/Al Jazeera]

Guyana’s government does a good job in making sure illegally deforested trees don’t make their way into the broader supply chain, according to environmentalists [Chris Arsenault/Al Jazeera]

When it comes to log­ging, Guyana al­so has “a strong ver­i­fi­ca­tion sys­tem” to make sure trees from il­le­gal­ly de­for­est­ed land aren’t eas­i­ly ex­port­ed or sold do­mes­ti­cal­ly, said Aiesha Williams, head of the World Wildlife Fund’s lo­cal branch.

“This track­ing of de­for­esta­tion has been im­por­tant,” Williams told Al Jazeera dur­ing an in­ter­view in the con­ser­va­tion group’s George­town of­fice. “Most de­for­esta­tion is re­lat­ed to gold min­ing.”

Her group works with James and the SRDC, along with oth­er re­mote In­dige­nous com­mu­ni­ties, on pro­vid­ing tech­ni­cal as­sis­tance on for­est pro­tec­tion, in­clud­ing the satel­lite phones and GIS kits they use to track wild­cat gold min­ers.

With vast porous bor­ders, min­ers from Brazil and oth­er neigh­bour­ing coun­tries, along with do­mes­tic prospec­tors, have been en­ter­ing ar­eas like the Rupi­n­uni in greater num­bers re­cent­ly, she said.

“The threats to the forests are in­creas­ing and so must our ef­forts,” said Williams.

Guyana’s Forestry Com­mis­sion, a gov­ern­ment body tasked with pro­tect­ing the rain­for­est, did not re­spond to mul­ti­ple calls and emails re­quest­ing com­ment.

Gold mining has been a driver of deforestation in southern Guyana [File: Rustom Seegopaul/Al Jazeera]

Gold mining has been a driver of deforestation in southern Guyana [File: Rustom Seegopaul/Al Jazeera]

 

Land ti­tles

 

One of the most ef­fec­tive strate­gies for for­est pro­tec­tion in­volves for­mal recog­ni­tion of In­dige­nous land rights, ac­cord­ing to sci­en­tists. And part of Guyana’s rel­a­tive suc­cess in rain­for­est pro­tec­tion re­lates to its land ti­tling sys­tem, said James.

“Guyana has some of the strongest leg­is­la­tion in place to pro­tect those land rights,” he said, though he would like to see the process sped up. “Once ti­tle is giv­en to a com­mu­ni­ty it’s ab­solute and for­ev­er, un­like in oth­er coun­tries.”

For­est land for­mal­ly con­trolled by In­dige­nous com­mu­ni­ties has the best out­comes for con­ser­va­tion and bio­di­ver­si­ty, ac­cord­ing to two ma­jor stud­ies on rain­for­est pro­tec­tion from Pe­ru and Brazil pub­lished in the Pro­ceed­ings of the Na­tion­al Acad­e­my of Sci­ences.

Forest rangers working with the South Rupununi District Council patrol for illegal logging in the Amazon rainforest [File: SRDC via Al Jazeera]

Forest rangers working with the South Rupununi District Council patrol for illegal logging in the Amazon rainforest [File: SRDC via Al Jazeera]

In Pe­ru, with­in a two-year win­dow af­ter land ti­tle was grant­ed to an In­dige­nous com­mu­ni­ty, for­est dis­tur­bance on av­er­age dropped by rough­ly two-thirds, and clear­ing dropped by more than three-quar­ters, a 2017 study found.

Part of the rea­son why de­for­esta­tion has in­ten­si­fied so rapid­ly in Brazil in the past two years un­der the gov­ern­ment of far-right Pres­i­dent Jair Bol­sonaro is that In­dige­nous land rights haven’t been re­spect­ed, sci­en­tists said.

Wild­cat min­ers and log­gers have been tac­it­ly en­cour­aged to en­ter In­dige­nous re­serves for ex­trac­tion, lead­ing de­for­esta­tion in South Amer­i­ca’s largest coun­try to hit a 15-year high in No­vem­ber.

In­dige­nous com­mu­ni­ties in Guyana hold land ti­tle to about 13 per­cent of the coun­try’s ter­ri­to­ry, ac­cord­ing to da­ta from the UN De­vel­op­ment Pro­gramme. Lo­cal com­mu­ni­ties are push­ing the gov­ern­ment to speed up grant­i­ng for­mal ti­tles for an­ces­tral for­est lands which cov­er larg­er swaths of rur­al Guyana.

“If those tra­di­tion­al lands can be recog­nised, hav­ing it ab­solute and for­ev­er in the hands of lo­cal com­mu­ni­ties who can man­age and con­trol those ar­eas — that would de­ter threats like min­ing and il­le­gal log­ging at the lo­cal lev­el,” James said.

___

Sto­ry by CHRIS AR­SE­NAULT (Al Jazeera), in part­ner­ship with the Pulitzer Cen­ter on Cri­sis Re­port­ing.

GuyanaEnvironmentForest


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