4.6 Article

Land-use intensity of official mineral extraction in the Amazon region: Linking economic and spatial data

Journal

LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 1706-1717

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ldr.3810

Keywords

Amazon; deforestation; mining activities; protected area; remote sensing

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Amazon region has seen significant deforestation due to mining activities, with gold mining being the major contributor. Mining in protected areas is dominated by artisanal gold mining, while industrial-scale iron ore mining has relatively lower impacts on mining areas.
The Amazon region has suffered considerable deforestation rates related to logging, cattle ranching, and agriculture. Recently, attention has been given to deforestation due to mining activities. This paper aims to estimate the land area affected by mining activities in protected and nonprotected areas, the value of the traded mineral extraction per commodity, and the mineral commodity with the highest trade (mineral extraction per mining area). Our results show that mining activities occupied 1,110 km(2) of the Amazon, where 65% and 35% of this was due to artisanal and industrial-scale mining, respectively. Gold exploitation was responsible for 58% of the total, followed by aluminum (15%), tin (13%), and iron (8%). In the region, 47% of the total mining area was located inside protected areas, where extraction was dominated by artisanal gold mining. The Amazonian states generated US$ 12.6 billion in 2017. Analysis of the values of the traded production showed that iron was responsible for 63.6%, followed by copper (16.2%), aluminum (7.6%), and gold (6.5%). The value of the traded production of gold was relatively low (US$ 810 million) in comparison to iron (US$ 8.01 billion) and copper (US$ 2.04 billion), which occupied the smallest areas. The value of the traded production per area showed that iron ore exploitation generated US$ 91.8 million/km(2), while gold generated only 1.3 million/km(2). We conclude that the industrial mining of iron ore presented the lowest impacts in mining areas with higher traded mineral extraction, while artisanal gold production ran contrary to environmental conservation goals.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available