<p>It has not gotten much attention with the world focused on coronavirus, but deforestation has surged in the Amazon rainforest this year, raising fears of a repeat of last year's record-breaking devastation -- or worse.</p>.<p>Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon hit a new high in the first four months of the year, according to data released Friday by Brazil's National Space Research Institute (INPE), which uses satellite images to track the destruction.</p>.<p>A total of 1,202 square kilometers of forest (464 square miles) -- an area more than 20 times the size of Manhattan -- was wiped out in the Brazilian Amazon from January to April, it found.</p>.<p>That was a 55 percent increase from the same period last year, and the highest figure for the first four months of the year since monthly records began in August 2015.</p>.<p>The numbers raise new questions about how well Brazil is protecting its share of the world's biggest rainforest under President Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right climate change skeptic who advocates opening protected lands to mining and farming.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately, it looks like what we can expect for this year are more record-breaking fires and deforestation," Greenpeace campaigner Romulo Batista said in a statement.</p>.<p>Last year, in Bolsonaro's first year in office, deforestation soared 85 percent in the Brazilian Amazon, to 10,123 square kilometers of forest.</p>.<p>That loss -- nearly the size of Lebanon -- fueled worldwide alarm over the future of the rainforest, seen as vital to curbing climate change.</p>.<p>The destruction was driven by record wildfires that raged across the Amazon from May to October, in addition to illegal logging, mining and farming on protected lands.</p>.<p>The trend so far in 2020 is all the more worrying given that the usual high season for deforestation only starts in late May.</p>.<p>"The beginning of the year is not the time where deforestation normally happens, because it's raining, and it's raining a lot," said Erika Berenguer, an ecologist at Oxford and Lancaster Universities.</p>.<p>"In the past, when we see deforestation increase in the beginning of the year, it's an indicator that when deforestation season starts... you're going to see an increase, as well."</p>.<p>Bolsonaro this week authorized the army to deploy to the Amazon to fight fires and deforestation from May 11.</p>.<p>He also deployed the army last year, after facing scathing international criticism for downplaying the fires.</p>.<p>Environmentalists said a better plan would be to give more support to Brazil's environmental protection programs.</p>.<p>Under Bolsonaro, environmental agency IBAMA has faced staffing and budget cuts. Last month, the government fired the agency's top environmental enforcement officer, after he authorized a raid on illegal miners that was broadcast on television.</p>.<p>Another problem with the government's military strategy, said Berenguer, is that it has focused exclusively on fires.</p>.<p>That ignores the fact that fires are often caused by illegal farmers and ranchers bulldozing trees and then burning them, she told AFP.</p>.<p>Addressing only the fires "is like me taking paracetamol because I have a toothache: it's going to reduce the pain, but if it's a cavity, it's not going to cure it," she said.</p>.<p>The coronavirus pandemic is only making things more complicated in the Amazon region.</p>.<p>Brazil, which holds more than 60 percent of the Amazon, is the epicenter of the pandemic in Latin America, with nearly 10,000 deaths so far.</p>.<p>The state of Amazonas, largely covered in forest, has been one of the hardest hit.</p>.<p>With only one intensive care unit, the state has been overwhelmed by the outbreak.</p>.<p>There are also fears of the potentially devastating effects the virus could have among indigenous communities, which are historically vulnerable to outside diseases.</p>.<p>With attention, resources and lives taken away by coronavirus, the fear is that officials, environmentalists and inhabitants could have less capacity to protect the forest.</p>.<p>The mayor of the state capital, Manaus, Arthur Virgilio, drew a link between the two tragedies this week in an appeal for help from world leaders.</p>.<p>"We need medical personnel, ventilators, protective equipment, anything that can save the lives of those who protect the forest," he said.</p>.<p>It is unclear whether the pandemic will have an impact on deforestation, but the fact that they have surged in tandem in Brazil is cause for concern.</p>.<p>"There is a web of connected factors (driving deforestation), and in the context of coronavirus, things are even more worrying," Greenpeace Brazil spokeswoman Carolina Marcal told AFP.</p>
<p>It has not gotten much attention with the world focused on coronavirus, but deforestation has surged in the Amazon rainforest this year, raising fears of a repeat of last year's record-breaking devastation -- or worse.</p>.<p>Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon hit a new high in the first four months of the year, according to data released Friday by Brazil's National Space Research Institute (INPE), which uses satellite images to track the destruction.</p>.<p>A total of 1,202 square kilometers of forest (464 square miles) -- an area more than 20 times the size of Manhattan -- was wiped out in the Brazilian Amazon from January to April, it found.</p>.<p>That was a 55 percent increase from the same period last year, and the highest figure for the first four months of the year since monthly records began in August 2015.</p>.<p>The numbers raise new questions about how well Brazil is protecting its share of the world's biggest rainforest under President Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right climate change skeptic who advocates opening protected lands to mining and farming.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately, it looks like what we can expect for this year are more record-breaking fires and deforestation," Greenpeace campaigner Romulo Batista said in a statement.</p>.<p>Last year, in Bolsonaro's first year in office, deforestation soared 85 percent in the Brazilian Amazon, to 10,123 square kilometers of forest.</p>.<p>That loss -- nearly the size of Lebanon -- fueled worldwide alarm over the future of the rainforest, seen as vital to curbing climate change.</p>.<p>The destruction was driven by record wildfires that raged across the Amazon from May to October, in addition to illegal logging, mining and farming on protected lands.</p>.<p>The trend so far in 2020 is all the more worrying given that the usual high season for deforestation only starts in late May.</p>.<p>"The beginning of the year is not the time where deforestation normally happens, because it's raining, and it's raining a lot," said Erika Berenguer, an ecologist at Oxford and Lancaster Universities.</p>.<p>"In the past, when we see deforestation increase in the beginning of the year, it's an indicator that when deforestation season starts... you're going to see an increase, as well."</p>.<p>Bolsonaro this week authorized the army to deploy to the Amazon to fight fires and deforestation from May 11.</p>.<p>He also deployed the army last year, after facing scathing international criticism for downplaying the fires.</p>.<p>Environmentalists said a better plan would be to give more support to Brazil's environmental protection programs.</p>.<p>Under Bolsonaro, environmental agency IBAMA has faced staffing and budget cuts. Last month, the government fired the agency's top environmental enforcement officer, after he authorized a raid on illegal miners that was broadcast on television.</p>.<p>Another problem with the government's military strategy, said Berenguer, is that it has focused exclusively on fires.</p>.<p>That ignores the fact that fires are often caused by illegal farmers and ranchers bulldozing trees and then burning them, she told AFP.</p>.<p>Addressing only the fires "is like me taking paracetamol because I have a toothache: it's going to reduce the pain, but if it's a cavity, it's not going to cure it," she said.</p>.<p>The coronavirus pandemic is only making things more complicated in the Amazon region.</p>.<p>Brazil, which holds more than 60 percent of the Amazon, is the epicenter of the pandemic in Latin America, with nearly 10,000 deaths so far.</p>.<p>The state of Amazonas, largely covered in forest, has been one of the hardest hit.</p>.<p>With only one intensive care unit, the state has been overwhelmed by the outbreak.</p>.<p>There are also fears of the potentially devastating effects the virus could have among indigenous communities, which are historically vulnerable to outside diseases.</p>.<p>With attention, resources and lives taken away by coronavirus, the fear is that officials, environmentalists and inhabitants could have less capacity to protect the forest.</p>.<p>The mayor of the state capital, Manaus, Arthur Virgilio, drew a link between the two tragedies this week in an appeal for help from world leaders.</p>.<p>"We need medical personnel, ventilators, protective equipment, anything that can save the lives of those who protect the forest," he said.</p>.<p>It is unclear whether the pandemic will have an impact on deforestation, but the fact that they have surged in tandem in Brazil is cause for concern.</p>.<p>"There is a web of connected factors (driving deforestation), and in the context of coronavirus, things are even more worrying," Greenpeace Brazil spokeswoman Carolina Marcal told AFP.</p>