Environmental impact assessment in Brazilian Amazonia: Challenges and prospects to assess biodiversity
Other text in scientific journal, 2017

Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) has the goal of providing decision makers with an indication of the likely environmental consequences of planned actions risking environmental changes and, when necessary, allowing revision of these actions to mitigate adverse impacts. Here we provide an overview of the efficiency of EIA with emphasis on Brazilian Amazonia and discuss the problems and challenges with this type of assessment in highly diverse ecosystems. We concentrate on the methodology and performance of EIAs for three of the most recent and largest infrastructure projects in Amazonia: the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam, the BR-319 Highway, and the Juruti bauxite mine. We conclude that all of these EIAs fall short of properly assessing the expected impact of infrastructure development in situ, and that their results had little or no effect on policy decisions. To improve the reliability and usefulness of EIAs in biologically diverse ecosystems, We suggest three relatively fast and cost-effective complementary approaches for assessing biodiversity: remote sensing, reflectance spectroscopy, and DNA meta-barcoding. We discuss how these emerging cutting-edge techniques can help in identifying environmental threats and the consequences of different activities in Amazonia. The ability to monitor the state of the environment and the likely impacts of human activities on natural resources is fundamental to evidence-based decisions on development choices, to the design of appropriate management strategies, and to mitigate biological and ecological consequences.

Author

Camila Ritter

Gothenburg Global Biodiversity Centre

University of Gothenburg

G. McCrate

Amazonas CEP

R. Henrik Nilsson

Gothenburg Global Biodiversity Centre

University of Gothenburg

P. M. Fearnside

Brazilian Research Network on Climate Change - Rede Clima

Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazonia

Ulrika Palme

Chalmers, Energy and Environment, Environmental Systems Analysis

Alexandre Antonelli

Gothenburg Global Biodiversity Centre

University of Gothenburg

Biological Conservation

0006-3207 (ISSN)

Vol. 206 161-168

Subject Categories

Biological Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.biocon.2016.12.031

More information

Latest update

7/5/2021 1