The enormous segment of Amazonian rainforest that covers over half of the country has always been an issue of contention for Peru due to the number of indigenous tribes that inhabit it. As early as the 16th century, the Peruvian Amazon has been linked to the world market, providing such products as timber, rubber, and quinine to an increasing global market.
The Peruvian segment of the Amazon is the setting for a wide variety of rare plant and animal species. The Peruvian rainforest is home to 25,000 species of plants, totaling ten percent of the world’s inventory. Peru boasts the world’s second largest population of birds and is among the top five countries for providing a habitat for thousands of mammals and reptiles. Of Peru’s 2,937 known species of amphibians, birds, mammals, and reptiles, 16 percent are endemic to the region and every year scientists are discovering new species. In 2010, scientists found a new species of leech and a new type of mosquito.1Sadly, most of these discoveries depend upon, mining, logging and oil companies that have been granted exploratory rights to Amazonian lands.
Peru’s Ministry of the Environment boasts that 15 percent of Peruvian territory is under a protected status, “…and we’re aiming for 30 percent,” said Environment Minister Antonio Brack.2 However, such statements fail to acknowledge the prodigious amounts of ongoing illegal extraction that is occurring in these allegedly government-protected areas. These government-labeled ‘protected areas’ are actually nothing more than forest regions without any special oversight by Peruvian officials.3 Furthermore, information regarding illegal extraction is provided mainly by the indigenous people, not by trained government authorities with professional responsibilities.
Development
Former President Alejandro Toledo’s administration (2001-2006), to a shocking degree, granted large energy concessions often in ecologically sensitive areas. Current President Alan García was not hesitant to pick up where Toledo left off. Presently, oil and gas settlements cover 41 percent of the Peruvian Amazon.4
Over the past three decades, mining and oil extraction have resulted in serious deforestation and widespread degradation of the country’s virgin woodlands. The machinery used by Peruvian miners to expose potential gold-yielding gravel deposits has led to mercury contamination in rivers and increased sedimentation in fragile environments within the rainforest. Furthermore, companies extracting resources from the Amazon have lowered worker transportation costs by constructing make-shift residences for employees in on-site locations.5 These settlements inevitably pollute the surrounding rainforest due to the consumption and later disposition of subsistence materials used by the workers.
Peru exports a large amount of timber, especially mahogany, overseas. According to Jose Alvarez, from the Research Institute of the Peruvian Amazon (IIAP), 95 percent of mahogany logged from the Amazon rainforest is felled illegally.6 Yet, this essentially illegal yield has gone almost completely unpunished.7 Peru promised to enforce its forestry surveillance obligations and increase the monitoring and regulation of illegal logging with the provisions of the U.S.-Peru Free Trade Agreement (FTA) of 2006, but has failed to follow through on this commitment.8 This ineptitude on Lima’s part has placed Peru under worldwide scrutiny from governments and environmental organizations because of its ineffective handling of the illegal cutting of prime forest by local loggers. The Peruvian government has signed many agreements as well as having pledged to honor its obligations under its environmental protection policies. Unfortunately, as long as there are companies that continue to profit from the exploitation of the rainforest, the government is likely to continue to turn a blind eye toward routinely doctored export reports.
Despite the ongoing illegal extraction within the Amazon region, the government does provide legitimate plans, however limited, for positive economic development with these regards to the rainforests. However, serious concerns over the well-being of the Amazon persist, especially as the government continues to distribute more contracts. On June 16, 2010, then Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed an energy agreement with President García outlining the construction of six hydroelectric power plants. The plants would be located in the Peruvian Amazon, but would supply Brazil with more than 6000 MW of power. On both sides of the border-split Amazon, ecologically minded citizens and indigenous populations have voiced their concern about the agreement, but found that their pleas fall on deaf ears.
Other projects currently underway include the transoceanic highway in the Southeast, meant to connect ports in Peru with those in Brazil. Amazon conservationists worry that the planned roads will spur excessive human settlements and more deforestation. This process repeatedly has transpired with similar road projects conducted within the Brazilian Amazon.9
Indigenous Response
Indigenous people account for approximately 40 percent of Peru’s population, with an estimated 60 uncontacted indigenous groups being scattered across the Peruvian terrain. According to the 1993 constitution, Peru considers itself to be a diverse and multicultural nation, ensures “the right to cultural identity”, and “upholds customary law and special jurisdiction (indigenous and peasant justice), alongside with other rights for peasant and native communities.”10 The authors of the Peruvian Constitution issued by the earlier Fuijimori administration, ostensibly recognized the importance of addressing indigenous rights to strengthen the Peruvian state, but this was as much a matter of style as substance.
The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on September 13, 2007. Article 10 of that declaration states that indigenous peoples are entitled to their land and must be consulted in regard to anything affecting their territorial claims. This is not a legally binding document; however, it does reflect the members’ commitment to their indigenous rights.11 In addition, the Peruvian government signed the International Labor Organization’s (ILO) Convention NO. 169, the American Convention on Human Rights, and Decision No. 5427-2009-PC/TC (paragraphs 68 and 69) of the Constitutional Court of Peru. All of these articles emphasize, in accordance with the constitution, the process and methodology behind a “free, prior, and informed consultation”12 that is needed in order to enact any measure affecting the indigenous territory in the Amazon.13 On December 13, 2010, a group of organizations and networks from the U.S., Belgium, and England questioned the alleged consultation process of Peru’s Forestry Act and asked Lima officials to respect obligations mandated by their constitution.14
Free Trade With Peru
The U.S. Congress approved the U.S.-Peru FTA on December 4, 2007. It was met with robust opposition within Peru and abroad due to its ambiguous section regarding the protection of the nation’s forest reserves. Under Article: 18.1: Levels of Protection,
“Recognizing the sovereign right of each Party to establish its own levels of domestic environmental protection and environmental development priorities, and to adopt or modify accordingly its environmental laws and policies (italicized for emphasis), each Party shall strive to ensure that those laws and policies provide for and encourage high levels of environmental protection and shall strive to continue to improve its respective levels of environmental protection.”15
Unfortunately, protecting the world’s shrinking lungs is dependent upon the frangible honor code of President García and his administration.
By signing the FTA, the Peruvian government was able to significantly sidestep the legislature and indigenous people by adopting a series of contracts with corporations, while emphasizing the rights given to it by Article 18 of the FTA. The FTA also hindered the government’s authority in the Amazon due to rights allocated to corporations who now may sue the government if Lima’s enforcement of environmental laws results in lost profit.16 Public Citizen writers and researchers Travis McArthur and Todd Tucker reported that less than a month after former President George W. Bush signed the agreement with Peru, García’s administration pushed the measure Law Number 29157 through legislation allowing new powers to the García administration in order to implement any FTA-related measure without legislative approval for a period of six months. With this new authority, García was able to restructure land rights through dozens of decrees which decimated environmental regulations, destroyed arable land in preparation for livestock grazing, and permitted previously allocated land for indigenous populations as production reserves to be siphoned off and sold to foreign oil and mining companies.17
Reportedly, the Bush administration was directly involved with the formulation of the Peruvian decrees. According to Inside U.S. Trade, two teams of U.S. officials traveled to Peru to finalize at least 35 of the new Peruvian laws with the García administration.18 The administration claimed that the anti-environment foreign-investor-land-use decrees were necessary to implement the FTA, but this statement sparked hostility among environmental activists. After President Barack Obama entered the White House, several U.S. environmental groups that had worked with the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) on the FTA’s forestry index (environment section) voiced their issues with its use. They advocated for the repudiation of the García administration’s claim—that the anti-environment foreign-investor-land-use decrees were necessary in order to implement the Peru FTA—the USTR (main composer of the Peru FTA) refused to show that these decrees were both not necessary nor supportive by the Peru FTA.19 In response, Amazon conservationists and indigenous peoples organized protests against García’s issued decrees, which led up to the Bagua Massacre.
On June 5, 2009, Peruvian indigenous groups, the Awajun and Wami, gathered in a peaceful protest outside of Bagua to voice their discontent regarding rainforest degradation in the area. Reportedly, 600 Peruvian police along with several helicopters attacked the protesters, killing 125 and injuring 150. Police are said to have fired tear gas and live ammunition into the crowd. After the protest had been staged, Peruvian authorities reported that 22 police officers had been killed and that two were missing. The government-controlled media claimed that the indigenous groups had been the instigators, and the police were the victims. Indigenous advocates such as the National Organization of the Amazon Indigenous people of Peru (AIDSEP), believe that the government prevented the media from reporting the event in any way sympathetic to the indigenous population of the Northern Peruvian Amazon.20
On the night of the Bagua massacre, President García admonished, “When one thinks of the final moments of those officers who were disarmed, tied up and then had their throats slit like animals, one understands the barbarity and savageness….There is a conspiracy aimed at stopping us from using our natural resources for the good, growth and quality of life of our people.”21 Even though this opinion is widely supported, indigenous groups have repeatedly maintained that they do not wish to hinder the nation’s economic progress. They are merely defending the ownership rights guaranteed by the 1989 United Nations International Labour Convention 169 (held by the ILO), which require indigenous consultation on development projects. The Peruvian government bypasses these rights through a political loophole of the FTA mentioned earlier, which allows them to pass laws that undermine Convention 169.22 García has argued that Peru cannot reject the commitment made through the FTA; however, the FTA should not take priority over constitutional and international obligations.
García is not only sanctioning the ransacking of the rainforest, but he is also disregarding human beings who reside there. Speaking to the Council on Hemispheric Affairs about the uncontacted indigenous groups in Peru (groups of indigenous people that voluntarily live in isolation from other civilizations of the world) Christina Chauvenet, a Survival International Press Officer says, “There are threats from illegal logging and poaching gangs which the Peruvian government has not done anything to restrain….President Alan García himself refuses to acknowledge that they even exist.” Ultimately, logging and prospecting crews could do irreparable harm to these indigenous tribes’ by contaminating food and water supplies in addition to other natural resources necessary for their survival. The large number of workers needed for these construction projects very often facilitate the bringing of new diseases to the tribes, against which they have no biological resistance, resulting in the contraction of grave illness and even death. The illegal loggers are known to use violence toward the Amazonian inhabitants obstructing their operations. This combination could result in the complete decimation of these tribes. According to Survival International, “More than 50% of the previously uncontacted Nahua tribe were wiped out following oil exploration on their land in the early 1980s, and the same tragedy engulfed the Murunahua in the mid-1990s, after it was forcibly contacted by illegal mahogany loggers.”23 Due to the recent exploration boom under García’s administration, an expected 70 percent of the Peruvian Amazon will be leased to oil and gas companies, making regulation vital.24
Peru’s foreign ministry announced on February 2, 2011 that it will work with Brazil’s world renowned National Indian Foundation (FUNAI) to protect the rights of Amazonian tribes, in order to preserve uncontacted indigenous and their lands. This was in reaction to photos released January 31 showing uncontacted tribes on the border of the Peruvian Amazon. Christina Chauvenet says this is “a huge step in the right direction,” but her organization will be closely monitoring the Peruvian government to ensure they follow through on their statement in the coming months. Following this, the government has begun to put pressure towards on-going illegal extraction, like having the air force destroy illegal dredgers, but questions and resentment still rise amongst citizens. Protests against the Tia Maria project in Peru’s Southern Copper mines were able to suspend the owner, Southern Copper Corp. (SCCO), from further progress for 180 days. However, it took a martyr, fighting for his right to protect potential damage to his water supply and environment, for Peru’s Mining and Energy Ministry to shed light on the event by paralyzing the project for half a year. In a statement, the Ministry acknowledged that they halted the project in order to keep “social peace.”25 As commodity prices rise, such as copper, investors will look to Peru’s investment-led economy for their resources.
García ascended to the presidency hoping to improve Peru’s economic growth and has succeeded. As reported by the Economist, Peru had experienced a GDP growth rate of 9.8 percent in 2008, but the consequence is that the Peruvian Amazon is paying the bill; despite economic growth, social development remains stagnant.26 Now, thanks to the efforts of organizations fighting to preserve the rainforests, the Peruvian government is beginning to realize that indeed, these uncontacted tribes do exist and indigenous rights need to be respected.
State of the Amazon
The section of the planet that is most vulnerable to human emissions are the Andes. Peru is home to 70 percent of the world’s tropical ice glaciers, which are of critical importance to the drinking water, irrigation, and electricity of the region. Scientists are reporting that the glaciers are disappearing faster than they previously anticipated. According to a World Bank report, Environmental and Climate Change in Latin America and the Caribbean-Policy Brief, in 2009, “The Peruvian White Mountain Range… [h]as already lost 26% of glacier mass and this loss is accelerating.” The report continues, “[i]t is estimated that by 2050, glaciers in the sub-region will only exist above 6,000 meters of altitude, and it is probable that small glaciers would have completely disappeared by 2025.”27Glacial melting will have enormous impacts on water availability and electricity generation for the Andean countries, which rely on glaciers for more than 70 percent of their electricity. By 2020, 40 million people could be affected by deficiencies in hydro energy, irrigation capacity, and clean drinking water. These forthcoming consequences led the World Bank to call upon Andean governments to “[d]raw up an Andean Strategy on Climate Change…to cope with and mitigate climate change-related effects.”28 However, no tangible developments have been enacted by the Peruvian government to date, as the glaciers rapidly recede into non-existence.
A year after the plea from the World Bank, the Amazon finds itself reeling from the worst drought ever recorded. On February 2, 2011, a joint commission of British and Brazilian scientists reported that the drought in 2010 (covering over 1.16 million square-miles) was worse than the drought in 2005 (covering 734,000 square miles), which was thought to be a once-in-a-century phenomenon.29 During the 2005 drought, the Amazon released a combined 5 billion tons of heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere. Writing for Climate Change, Nick Sundt exclaimed that the Amazon absorbs 2 billion tons of atmospheric carbon dioxide a year. The British and Brazilian team found that the 2010 drought may soon exceed the 5 billion tons of carbon dioxide reportedly released in 2005.30 The Rio Negro was reported to be at its lowest point on record, 13 feet below its dry-season average, during the 2010 drought.31
The burning of forests releases about 22 percent of anthropogenic CO2 emissions, which are emissions of carbon dioxide caused by humans. This does not include the other harmful greenhouse gases that are released during deforestation such as, nitrous oxide, methane, and other nitrogen oxides. This immense deforestation is dismantling a vital machine that creates the very air we breathe and cannot be replaced once it is destroyed. Scientists are reporting that if deforestation continues at the same pace, then the natural environment will be unable to recuperate and regenerate.32 Peruvian officials need to start developing better conservation strategies before their country becomes a case study of how climate change can bring a nation to its knees.
Brazilian Policy
Peru could learn conservation methods merely by looking over the Amazonian treetops to its eastern neighbor, Brazil. In that country, deforestation rates dropped 45.7 percent from August 2008 to July 200933 and reportedly another 14 percent from August 2009 to July 2010.34 Credit is given largely to Brazil’s Action Plan for Deforestation Control and Prevention in the Amazon; a set of intra-governmental policies and measures that were launched in 2004. The plan still aims to improve monitoring, strengthen enforcement of legal logging, define conservation areas, and aid sustainable activities in the area.35Through the use of satellite surveillance to prevent illegal logging, Chauvenet asserts that Brazil has developed, “one of the best policies regarding these isolated groups in the world.”
However, Brazil has not made a complete turnaround in protecting the Amazon and its inhabitants. At the end of January 2011, the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA) issued a ‘partial’ license for the commencement of construction for the Belo Monte Dam, which would be the third largest in the world, and provide Brazilians with thousands of MW of electricity. If the dam is built, construction would destroy a large area of the forest and harm fish reserves, which are crucial to the indigenous residing in the area. Survival International announced on February 2, 2011 that “Brazil’s Public Prosecutor’s Office has called for the immediate suspension of the license, which was issued illegally as the majority of conditions required for an installation license to be granted—conditions set by IBAMA itself—have not been met.” Public Prosecutor Felicio Pontes Jr. said, “Following decisions like this one, we can call IBAMA the biggest environmental violator of the Amazon.”36 If President Dilma Rousseff wishes to maintain Brazil’s world-renowned conservationist reputation, she may want to revise her aspirations of 70 large dams to be built within the next two decades.
Recommendations
The Amazon significantly contributes to lessening the amount of carbon emissions in the atmosphere; it is in the interest of Peru and the planet as a whole to conserve what is left of the largest rainforest on Earth. The Peruvian government should oversee an investigation of the Ministry of the Environment and determine if their best interests indeed do lie in the environment and those that inhabit its rainforests.
The National Organization of the Amazon Indigenous people of Peru (AIDESEP), in a letter to the Minister of the Environment Mr. Antonio Brack Egg, responded critically to the Readiness Preparation Proposal of Peru (R-PP), a document that Latin American countries have composed in order to be recognized as a contributor to forest conservation by the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF). AIDESEP addressed some issues they had with the document, for example, the Minister did not address the root causes affecting the Amazon such as resource extraction.37 Peru, in order to be acknowledged by the FCPF as an active member in reducing forest degradation had to pass this R-PP document. The languorously inclined Minister of the Environment should commission an investigation allowing him to expose core problems when dealing with the indigenous groups. Minister Egg should work towards reducing degradation rather than using his best efforts to achieve a non-effective R-PP label for archly political reasons.
In this same letter, The National Organization of the Amazon Indigenous people of Peru AIDESEP asked the Energy Ministry to properly clarify if they sought consultation from local inhabitants before awarding fourteen more contracts for oil and gas explorations. As AIDESEP points out, the government shyly mentions that they consulted with the tribes and representative organizations, but provide no proof of this. As AIDESEP expressed in their letter, “…[t]he competent public authorities are ignoring as many as 300 communities that have ancestral titles and therefore should be taken into consideration.”38 The government should create enforcement mechanisms for their forestry laws and the international regulations that give the indigenous people their rights.
Alternatively, more environmentally-friendly solutions for increasing the economic output of the Amazon are readily available. Investing in agro-forestry, which is currently practiced by indigenous groups and organizations in the Amazon, would be a sustainable way to profit from the rainforest in an eco-friendly manner. The Amazon boasts a vast array of profitable goods, such as Brazil nuts, coca, tropical fruits, and sacha inchi (a vine with a nut that is sold for its value in omega 6 and 9), not to mention the thousands of plant species used in medicines, and those that have yet to be discovered. As Rainer W. Bussmann and Douglas Sharon emphasize in their journal on Peruvian medicine, “everyone has an interest in preserving rainforests because they might contain compounds that could cure cancer, HIV-AIDS, and other diseases.”39 If the current practice of slash and burn exploration continues, then many of these plants and potential miracle medicines will never survive to be discovered. In a recent interview speaking to the Council on Hemispheric Affairs, Megan MacDowell, Amazon Conservation Association’s D.C. Office Director, stated that “agro-forestry is the most sustainable way to gain an income from a standing forest…but only if there is a healthy forest there to supply the industry.” In other words, with responsible investment, there is great potential for a sustainable agriculture industry to flourish within the Amazon.
The Peruvian government and licensed companies should provide compensation for those inhabitants of the Amazon whom are negatively affected by collateral operations. The government should consider creating a compensation process for those that can prove that they have been afflicted by extractive practices, including ongoing and postoperative-effects of operations. Such an act should enable the formulation of a body similar to the structure of the Brazilian FUNAI, instead of the ill structured Ministry of Environment.
Many environmentally hazardous incidents occur due to faulty practices or ill-engineered equipment used by corporations. Thus, it should be more difficult for companies to acquire licenses for projects that could leave scars on the rainforest. The Peruvian government should closely investigate the histories of corporations who plan to invest in the Amazon and their previous legacies in environmentally sensitive areas. Since most of the environmental damage is caused by leaks of old or degraded equipment. Peruvian authorities should monitor the types of materials and tools used to ensure companies are following regulations.
Looking Towards the Future
Peruvians should look closely to the upcoming April 10 elections for a candidate who will rid the Amazon of severely harmful extraction techniques, both legal and illegal. However, until the July inauguration (and maybe his own in 2016), García should contemplate the cost and benefits when signing concessions with international corporations that have little to no interest in the ultimate effect their practices have on Peru or the Amazon.
With these upcoming elections, all eyes are focused on the presidency and the future of economic growth following the García administration. Reportedly, President García has taken the opportunity to promote himself while attempting to tie-up some loose ends. The Latin News reported that García was attempting to distract citizens from the emergency decrees by giving them a tax break he announced on February 9, 2011.40 Skeptics suggest that he was merely anticipating the 2016 election, since he must wait until then to run again. Former president Alejandro Toledo, and outspoken critic of the García administration, argued this was “smoke and mirrors,” designed to distract citizens from the recent Urgent Decrees shoved through congress.41 Living in Peru reported that on February 7, 2011, two emergency decrees were quickly passed through congress with García’s backing. These decrees allow accelerated bidding on 33 investment projects by easing environmental regulations, which article 5.3 now declares, “[a]re no longer required to obtain administrative authorizations for these projects, and for any project in the near future.”42 García’s campaign to eradicate the rainforest is creatively being transferred to a legacy, where it seems he wishes to spring from if he is re-elected in 2016. Interestingly, the presidential race that will determine his successor does not have global warming on its agenda, even though loss of resources from the Amazon and the Andean glaciers will be an evident issue to be addressed during the next president’s five-year term.
References for this article can be found here