The Inter Press Service's Fabiola Ortiz has a nice overview of Brazil's growing interest in the resources in the exclusive economic zone off the Brazilian coast, on its continental shelf and beyond.
The Atlantic ocean is Brazil’s last frontier to the east. But the full extent of its biodiversity is still unknown, and scientific research and conservation measures are lagging compared to the pace of exploitation of resources such as oil.
The Blue Amazon, as Brazil’s authorities have begun to call this marine area rich in both biodiversity and energy resources, is similar in extension to the country’s rainforest – nearly half the size of the national territory.
And 95 percent of the exports of Latin America’s giant leave from that coast, according to official figures.
Brazil’s continental shelf holds 90 and 77 percent of the country’s proven oil and gas reserves, respectively. But the big challenge is to protect the wealth of the Blue Amazon along 8,500 km of shoreline.
“We haven’t fully grasped just how immense that territory is,” Eurico de Lima Figueiredo, the director of the Strategic Studies Institute at the Fluminense Federal University, told Tierramérica. “To give you an idea, the Blue Amazon is comparable in size to India.”
“But we aren’t prepared to take care of it; it isn’t yet considered a political and economic priority for the country,” the political scientist said.