Amazon Rainforest in Brazil is under attack from a variety of sources. The Rainforests are not only integral to the Brazilian economy, but to the world as well. The Rainforest provides a rich source of natural and generative resources to the country as well as serve as one of the largest natural carbon deposits, or carbon sinks, on the planet. The country is home to nearly half of Earth's rainforests, gobbling up 2 billion tons of carbon dioxide every year -- a third of the United States' 2010 greenhouse gas output (Editorial Board, 2012). There are three primary themes that emerge in this trend.
The first is that deforestation is threatening the vitality of the Earth's regenerative systems through soil degradation as well as the loss of carbon sinks. Another theme is that the use of the forest is not being used to its economic potential. Environmental issues aside, burning forest to make room for farms or livestock is not a viable economic solution as it creates enormous amounts of waste. Finally, despite the natural resources that have a local impact, the rainforests have a global impact in their role in regulating the carbon cycle. This could have substantial ramifications for the Earth's climate as well as initiate a feedback process that would accelerate the damages being done to the Earth's ability to regulate its energy balance.
It is not only the rainforests of Brazil that are being threatened, Brazil's Salto Morato Nature Preserve is a haven for scientists studying the dwindling Atlantic rainforest, an area less renowned than the Amazon forest but just as biologically diverse and equally threatened by human encroachment (Aziakou, 2012). All of these issues have made domestic political fodder for both sides of the isle. There is a tough balancing act between economic development and environmental preservation that
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