The other alters existing laws and regulations, for example requiring the nationâs mining regulator to establish simplified criteria for the analysis of permit requests for prospecting.
The measures spurred outrage from environmental and Indigenous rights groups, which warned they would exacerbate the illegal destruction of the worldâs largest tropical rainforest and pollution of its waterways with mercury, used to separate gold.
âThey run opposite to what the federal government should be doing,â Larissa Rodrigues, portfolio manager for an environmental think tank Choices Institute, said by phone. âThere is enormous illegality circulating in the chain that is measurable. The government should be concerned about controlling that chain and not giving more stimulus to it.â
Bolsonaro has been an outspoken champion of mining the Amazon since his presidential campaign in 2018, promising to unearth the rainforestâs vast mineral wealth. In doing so, he garnered vast support from prospectors. He is widely expected to run for reelection in October.
Nongovernment organizations have been sounding the alarm about how both the presidentâs comments and the reduction of environmental oversight during his term have emboldened illegal miners and spurred a gold rush, wreaking vast damage where they work.
But Bolsonaro, the son of a prospector himself, has been unmoved. He characterizes prospecting as one of the few alternatives available to people living in a vast, poor region with few opportunities.
âProspecting represents elevated potential for the generation of wealth and income for a population of hundreds of thousands of people,â according to a statement from the secretary general of the presidency.
An Associated Press investigation last month found that illegal landing strips and unauthorized airplanes have helped prospectors carry out tons of gold mined on Indigenous lands. The gold ends up in the hands of brokers, some of whom are under investigation by authorities for receiving gold from illegal mining â facilitated by a widespread lack of traceability. The gold is refined in Sao Paulo before becoming part of the global supply chain.
Rodriguesâ Choices Institute released a study last week that found 229 tons of gold with indications of illegality were sold from 2015 to 2020, or roughly half of national production â most of which originated in the Amazon. The study was based on the analysis of more than 40,000 sale records and satellite images of production sites.
Rodrigues added that the simplification of the mining regulatorâs permit process could usher in a wave of new requests or clearing of the agencyâs backlog of requests, causing âcomplete lack of control.â
One of the decrees creates a multiagency commission charged with developing policies to foment what it terms âartisanal mining,â and which it says will be sustainable.
However, most gold prospecting in the Amazon is far from artisanal, employing generators and heavy machinery for digging trenches and dredging rivers.
Beto Marubo, an Indigenous leader in the Javari Valley, a remote region of Brazil bordering Peru, said on Twitter that the decree represents âanother incentive for the destruction of the rivers, the forests, the life in our communities.â
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