Amazon deforestation brings economy boom,then bust

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Chopping down forests in  the Brazilian Amazon produces a boom-and-bust economy that  draws poor people to newly-cleared land but ultimately leaves  them no better off, researchers reported yesterday.
  
Environmental activists have long contended that this was  the case but a new study in the journal Science quantified the  phenomenon by tracking different stages of deforestation that  have been occurring for decades. 

“Although it’s generally assumed that deforestation is the  price to pay for development, we found that development is  actually transitory, it’s not a sustained improvement in  peoples’ well-being,” said lead author Ana Rodrigues.
  
Ideally, scientists would have studied Amazon deforestation  over time. Instead, they went to 286 municipalities at varying  stages along the timeline of deforestation, development and  decline, Rodrigues said in a telephone interview.  

The scientists monitored key indicators of human prosperity  — income, education and health — among settlers along the  Amazon’s deforested areas.
  
“We contrasted those values in different stages of the  deforestation frontier: before deforestation kicks in, bang in  the middle of the deforestation frontier and after it’s already  passed by,” Rodrigues said.  

The process typically works as follows:
  
First, poor, often landless people from around Brazil flock  to places where initial logging occurs, getting a quick  infusion of money and an improvement in quality of life.
  
The timber trade quickly gives way to farming and raising  livestock. At first the land is fertile and productive but it  soon declines. With no more timber to sell, settlers either  stay on whatever land they have managed to possess or head for  the next deforestation frontier.  

“We believe that the boom we see, the quick expansion …  in income and health and education is because people are very  quickly exploiting natural resources that weren’t accessible  before,” Rodrigues said.
  
“What happens afterwards is a combination of population  increase … and the over-exploitation of natural resources.”
  
The Amazon and other large old-growth forests are  increasingly valuable as repositories of climate-warming carbon  dioxide; vegetation on farm fields and pastures does not store  nearly as much. Any global agreement on curbing climate change is expected  to include provisions to discourage deforestation.