DIRECT ACTION OPPOSES DEFORESTATION AS YEAR COMES TO A CLOSE
~ Gabriel Fonten ~
On 17 December the Ada’itsx / Fairy Creek Blockade released footage of the
latest raids by Canadian police, who arrested activists camped in the Walbran
Valley in British Columbia. The activists, who have continued to blockade
logging roads despite the damage to their camp by police and harsh weather,
stand as the most recent iteration of a 30 year long campaign to defend Canada’s
old-growth forests in the region. The existing old-growth forest represents just
3% of what existed pre-colonisation and protects some of Canada’s richest
biodiversity and endangered species.
On the other side of the world in Australia, South West Forest Defenders ended
the year with a victory, successfully forcing the cancellation of planned burns
of Mt Clare, Nornalup and Coalmine/Knoll Tingle forest blocks for 2025/26. Their
campaign parallels activists in Canada in many ways: both came to the fore in
the 1990s, oppose the ruthless expansion of the logging industry in their
regions, and have used similar tactics such as blockades, tree-sitting, and mass
civil disobedience. Both have also put forward an alternative understanding of
the forests to the capitalists and politicians they oppose, emphasising shared
responsibility, intertwinement, and indigenous rights to the land that are
incompatible with its current exploitation.
Image: South West Forest Defenders of Facebook
Crucial to both is also their sustained efforts, including when victories are
achieved. In both cases, the Australian and Canadian governments have
compromised with the activists by creating national parks, delaying logging
operations, and cancelling burn plans. Yet campaigns have been ready to continue
when these protections ultimately give way to industry pressure once more. In
both cases this has led to decades of continued struggle, to both win
protections and ensure their enforcement. In the Canadian case, where mass civil
disobedience had been a crucial tactic, this has meant that the campaign to
defend Fairy Creek holds the record for the highest number of arrests in
Canadian history.
In an interview with Canada’s National Observer one organiser at the Fairy Creek
blockade stated that “Blockading is not a marathon; it’s a relay. We just hope
people will be here to pick up the baton”. Both campaigns stand as a testament
to the resilience and longevity needed to stave off the relentless exploitation
of the environment in a capitalist world, even when the pockets of old-growth
forests still left are tiny compared to the expanses already stripped bare.
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Top image: Fairy Creek Blockade on Facebook (not AI)
The post Forest defence in Canada and Australia appeared first on Freedom News.
Tag - deforestation
THEIR IDEA OF ‘SUSTAINABLE CAPITALISM’ IS TO SELL OFF THE RAINFOREST AND BUILD
MEGA-PROJECTS
~ Rafael Sanz, desinformemonos ~
COP 30 has begun in Belém, the capital of the state of Pará and the main city in
the Brazilian Amazon, a territory roughly the size of two Mexicos. The only
reason it isn’t burning as it did in 2024 is that this is a La Niña year,
meaning slightly more abundant rainfall in 2025. It will be the thirtieth time
that lobbyists and representatives of governments and corporations from around
the world gather to discuss fictions and unrealistic adjustments, green reforms
for capitalism, and innocuous decarbonisation targets that they themselves
routinely fail to meet, all while temperatures rise in the oceans, forests, and
territories inhabited by humans. And in 2025, the various global climate
representatives arrive in a rather complicated Brazil.
The first scene from this Brazil is the recent Penha-Alemã massacre in Rio de
Janeiro, where at least 128 bodies were executed by the state in the open air
and piled up in a public square. The bodies had barely cooled when the media
were already repeating the chorus from the state government itself (responsible
for the “operation”) that all the dead were members of the Comando Vermelho
criminal faction. Whether they were or not remains unknown. What is known is
that the police’s main targets, the drug kingpins, were neither victims nor
arrested, the city was paralysed for days, and the affected communities were
collectively punished for the presence of criminal groups there, both legal (128
corpses) and illegal.
But this approach to security is a constant throughout the country. In Rio,
everything has been tried, from community policing models (Pacifying Police
Units, UPPs) that have proven to be just as violent and prone to abuse as the
regular police, to the infamous GLOs (Law and Order Guarantee Operations), in
which the federal government authorises the use of the Armed Forces to assist
the state police with public safety. In 2017, for example, General Walter Braga
Netto led the GLO that promoted a military occupation of some Rio favelas,
including Complexo do Alemão. A candidate for Bolsonaro’s vice presidency in
2022, he is now convicted of attempting a coup.
And so the model arrived in the Amazon thanks to COP 30. Last Monday (3
November), President Lula signed a GLO for the capital of Pará at the request of
Governor Helder Barbalho. On Tuesday morning, the military began arriving en
masse with their land, water, and air vehicles.
Social movements fear the repression that such security measures could generate,
especially at COP 30, where Brazil is attempting to greenwash its recent
environmental decisions.
And by “recent” we don’t mean the tragedy we experienced under Bolsonaro’s
government, prior to Lula’s current third term, in which our biomes burned like
never before due to the deliberate federal promotion of expanding agribusiness
and mining frontiers. Given the previous disaster, the change in administration
brought with it the mistaken idea that the Brazilian state would be an ally of
the rest of humanity in the fight against the socio-environmental collapse we
witness daily. It is not.
Throughout this administration, contrary to campaign promises to demarcate
Indigenous and Quilombola territories and close the gap with extractive sectors
(agribusiness, mining, hydroelectric projects, and highways), we have seen the
opposite. Delays and bureaucratic obstacles have hindered the protection of
already demarcated Indigenous lands and the demarcation of new territories. The
encroachment of agribusiness into natural areas, culminating in the Day of Fire
in 2024, not to mention the frenzy to build highways, railways, and
hydroelectric plants that will primarily serve to distribute the predatory
agribusiness’s production and facilitate the mass arrival of foreign data
centers, with their high energy consumption and low-quality jobs for the working
class.
On the eve of COP 30, the energy transition model we are going to present to the
world is based on the premise of treating hydroelectric power as “clean energy,”
in contrast to thermoelectric and nuclear power plants abroad. But they fail to
include deforestation in the equation, which is the main cause of carbon
emissions here. Belo Monte, a hydroelectric dam built in Altamira (a
municipality in Pará affected by the recent GLO), destroyed the once-lush Xingu
River, turning it into a lake, but that’s not all. It also facilitated the
arrival of a development model that doesn’t consider preserving the rainforest.
The entire region has suffered deforestation and successive fires ever since.
The model under which hydroelectric plants are built requires the construction
of roads and railways that cut through the forest. These roads are necessary to
transport all the grain, timber, minerals, and electricity produced in the most
remote corners of Brazil. This infrastructure will also serve the small towns
that are beginning to grow as a result of this model, which places greater
demands on the previously preserved local environment. Two current examples in
the transportation sector illustrate this model: Ferrogrão and the
reconstruction of the BR-319 highway .
Ferrogrão is a planned 933 km railway, starting in Sinop (in the state of Mato
Grosso, a central area for soybean and corn production in Brazil’s Midwest
region) and reaching the port of Miritituba. From there, the transported produce
would travel down the Amazon River to the Caribbean Sea, then be shipped to
California and China. This multi-billion dollar project offers no social or
ecological benefits to Brazil beyond satisfying the immediate interests of
agribusiness. On the contrary, it will cut through conservation areas like
Jamanxim National Park and affect hundreds of Indigenous and peasant
communities. But there are two aggravating factors: first, the mere mention by
the federal government of building the railway has already stirred up the
region’s land market, which operates in a gray area between legality and
illegality, between speculation and displacement; The second aggravating factor
is that the transport of agro-industrial production to China and California
would be carried out through the Panama Canal, whose capacity for use is already
compromised due to the climate crisis.
And every time a railway or road is built in a previously untouched or
relatively undisturbed natural area, what is known as the “fishbone effect”
occurs—precisely a consequence of the booming grey market for land. Observe a
wooded area from above, as if from a satellite or drone. The main road is
opened, the backbone of the “fish.” Gradually, with the land market in full
swing (literally burning everything down), secondary roads are opened to provide
access to the newly occupied areas. And so we see how the landscape transforms
into something resembling a fishbone.
This is the main concern of serious environmentalists and the communities living
in the region where the BR-319 highway, which would connect Manaus (capital of
Amazonas) and Porto Velho (capital of Rondônia), is slated for reconstruction.
The problem is that this area, following a herringbone pattern, would extend the
arc of deforestation all the way to Manaus and open the way to still-preserved
areas of the western and northern Brazilian Amazon. This would cause the
collapse of Brazil’s most resilient Amazonian ecosystems. Brazilians would be
the first to feel the effects, with their rainfall system completely destroyed.
But the world would also see a slight increase in temperature, exacerbating the
global climate crisis.
Another problem with the charade of the ecological transition is that it doesn’t
address the quilombos (settlements of escaped slaves), indigenous lands, and
conservation areas, instead focusing on parcelling out forests and promising
their preservation through privatisation and maintaining the same logic of
private property that has brought us to this point in history. Let’s remember
that before capitalism, human societies were never a threat to life on the
planet, only to themselves.
The illusion surrounding the utopia of reforming capitalism is completed with
the final touch to this cake of ashes and fire: weeks before the start of COP
30, Ibama (the Brazilian Institute of the Environment, a federal agency)
authorised Petrobras (the state-owned oil company) to investigate the
feasibility of oil exploration at the mouth of the Amazon River. This is simply
a highly turbulent oceanic zone, where a single spill could affect several
neighbouring countries. An authorisation to investigate that will undoubtedly
become an authorisation to exploit, given the direction of the political debate.
But they want to sell us the idea that we are going to drill in a very complex
area from an environmental impact standpoint, extract rivers of oil, and burn it
so that, who knows, one day we can finally abandon fossil fuels. Perhaps when we
are all dead.
And while we watch year after year the “climate representatives” celebrating
their parties and discussing their fictions, temperatures continue to rise,
forests continue to fall, and people continue to live and die in increasingly
worse conditions. It is impossible to debate the climate issue without including
capital and the state in the equation as a problem rather than a solution.
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Image: Indigenous people from various regions protest during the free land camp
in Brasilia, 4 October. Joédson Alves/Agência Brasil
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