Leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) wealthy nations have offered US$20 million of emergency aid to help battle wildfires in the Amazon rainforest, a gesture Brazil slammed as colonialist.
Despite record wildfires in the Amazon and Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro previously saying his government lacked the money to fight the blazes, it was not clear if Brazil would accept the G7 offer amid growing international concern.
Reuters Newsagency reports personal relations between French President Emmanuel Macron and President Bolsonaro, already strained by the crisis in the Amazon, deteriorated even further after Brazil’s leader mocked President Macron’s wife on Facebook.
Facing increased isolation abroad for his stance on the unfolding environmental crisis, President Bolsonaro also found himself under mounting pressure at home, with a poll showing that his government’s approval rating sank to 29.4 per cent in August.
“We will straightaway offer Amazonian countries that signal to us their needs, financial support,” President Macron said in the wealthy resort of Biarritz on France’s Atlantic coast.
Reuters reports many of the fires sweeping through the Amazon are thought to have been deliberately started in Brazil, with environmentalists blaming speculators who burn vegetation to clear it in hopes of selling the land to farmers and ranchers.
Global anger and concern has been steadily rising as the blazes have raged because of the rainforest’s importance to the environment.
The Amazon is often described as “the lungs of the world” due to its vast ability to absorb carbon dioxide.
Within minutes of the G7 move, however, President Bolsonaro said Brazil was being treated like “a colony or no man’s land,” and denounced the creation of an international alliance to save the Amazon as an attack on his nation’s sovereignty.
However, Brazil’s Environment Minister
Ricardo Salles struck a different note, calling the aid “welcome.”
Later a presidential spokesman said President Bolsonaro might visit the Amazon region later this week, to check on the efforts to combat the fires.
Calling the Amazon fires a global emergency, President Macron pushed the disaster to the top of the G7 agenda and said the member states were ready to provide concrete help.
“France will do so with military support in the coming hours,” he said, without giving further details.
Canada said it would send water bombers to Brazil to help contain the blaze and was also contributing C$15 million in aid.
“One of the things we have seen over the past years as Canada has faced increasingly extreme wildfire events is there is a global network of support and friends that lean on each other,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said at the end of the summit.
Reuters reports Chilean President Sebastián Piñera was invited to join the wealthy-nation leaders in Biarritz, and said the G7 plan would be implemented in two stages.
“Countries urgently need fire fighters and specialised water bombers. This will be the first step that will be implemented immediately.
“The second phase is to protect these forests, protect the biodiversity they contain and reforest this region of the world,” he added.
The Amazon is home to an estimated one million indigenous people from up to 500 tribes as well some three million species of plants and animals, including jaguars, sloths, giant otters, river dolphins, howler monkeys, toucans, reptiles, frogs and insects.
President Macron added that the G7, which comprises the United States, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, Britain and Canada, would draw up an initiative for the Amazon that will be launched at next month’s United Nations General Assembly in New York.
US President Donald Trump was absent from the talks on climate change and biodiversity at a G7 session, and President Macron said he had been busy holding bilateral meetings.
“He wasn’t in the room, but his team was,” President Macron said.
“You shouldn’t read anything into the American president’s absence.
“The US are with us on biodiversity and on the Amazon initiative.”
However, in his closing news conference at the summit, President Trump made clear he was not about to embrace the environmentalist cause.
“We are now the number one energy producer in the world,” he said in response to a question about climate change.
“I’m not going to lose that wealth, I’m not going to lose it on dreams, on windmills, which frankly aren’t working too well,” he added.
EcoNews is an independent publication that relies on contributions from its readers.
WE’RE BUILDING A PLATFORM WITH A CLEAR FOCUS ON THE ENVIRONMENT, CULTURAL AND SOCIAL GOOD. CONTRIBUTE AND TOGETHER WE CAN MAKE AN IMPACT.





