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Forest fires in Bolivia: half a million hectares, 1.700 fighters and a Super tanker

Friday, August 23rd 2019 - 09:40 UTC
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President Morales announced that a new environmental emergency cabinet had been created to tackle blazes in Chiquitania bordering with Brazil and Paraguay. President Morales announced that a new environmental emergency cabinet had been created to tackle blazes in Chiquitania bordering with Brazil and Paraguay.
Morales also announced the hiring of a Boeing 747 Supertanker. The plane which can carry up to 70,400 liters of water is the largest aerial firefighting aircraft Morales also announced the hiring of a Boeing 747 Supertanker. The plane which can carry up to 70,400 liters of water is the largest aerial firefighting aircraft

Bolivian authorities warned this week that 70% of the department of Santa Cruz — where more than a quarter of the country's population lives — is under “extreme risk” from forest fires. According to the government, nearly 500,000 hectares of forest have now been turned into ashes.

President Evo Morales announced that a new environmental emergency cabinet had been created to tackle the blazes in the Chiquitania area which borders with Brazil and Paraguay.

The three Latin American countries have been battling raging wildfires in the Amazon rainforest

According to Brazil’s space research centre (INPE), 72,843 fires have hit the country's side of the Amazon — an 83% increase on last year and the highest number registered since records began in 2013. The smokes from the wildfires on Monday caused an hour-long blackout in Sao Paulo, located 2,700 kms away.

Morales also announced that the government had hired a Boeing 747 Supertanker. The plane which can carry up to 70,400 liters of water is the largest aerial firefighting aircraft in the world.

A fourth helicopter equipped with the Bambi bucket system to carry and release water has also been dispatched to assist the more than 1,700 soldiers, police officers and firefighters sent in to combat the flames and provide assistance to the population.

Greenpeace has blamed the record number of wildfires in the Brazilian Amazon on deforestation.

“The number of forest fires is higher in the Amazon regions most affected by deforestation practices, as fires are one of the main tools used for deforestation, including by farmers,” the NGO said in a statement on Thursday, attacking Jair Bolsonaro government's “dismantling” of the country's environmental policies.

It also warned that it could have severe meteorological consequences for the region but also for the globe.

“Forest fires and climate change operate in a vicious cycle: as the number of fires increase, so do greenhouse gas emissions, increasing the planet’s overall temperature and the occurrence of extreme weather events, such as major droughts,” it said.

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