Abstract

The Amazon Rain Forest has attracted worldwide attention due its large scale services to climate and also due to the green house gas emissions arising from deforestation. Contributing to the later and detrimental to the former, timber logging in the region has very low efficiency (only 16% in the production chain). Such timber extraction, often referred to as selective logging, has been claimed as a sustainable extractive industry, because the forest is said to restore itself through regenerative growth. But forest regeneration in the Amazon occurs naturally only in a very limited scale, resulting that large scale, low efficiency logging poses a big treat to the functional integrity of the biome, supplying to the market only a fraction of what it could if done differently. So, instead of extracting big centennial logs from the forests, the Amazonian Phoenix project proposes that large expanses of degraded lands be reforested using pioneer plants species from the forest itself. These plants have the capacity to heal gaps in the canopy, being able to grow and produce woody biomass in very extreme conditions. The idea is to mimic the regenerative dynamics of the natural ecosystem in short cycle agrosilvicultural production areas, utilizing a variety of technologies to transform raw fibers from these fast growth native plants into a variety of materials with high aggregated value. This communication presents the research on natural fibers by the Polymeric Composites Group within the Amazonian Phoenix Project. Sustainable technologies employing materials with good and responsible ecological footprints are important and necessary stimulus for a change in the destructive economical activities present in the Amazon frontiers. The relatively well established wood polymer composites technology, for example, is a good candidate solution. Two research and development fields are proposed: the first one considers production systems with simple and cheap machinery, to facilitate technology assimilation by rural communities in the Amazon. The second one aims at developing composite materials with advanced production technology, like profile and sheet extrusion and injection molding. The source of the fibers would be both the short cycle agrosilviculture with softwood species, on already deforested lands, and the hardwood residues from operating sawmills. Preliminary results show that softwood fibers act as potentially important reinforcement for synthetic plastics.

Highlights

  • Before the dawn of the industrial revolution, extractivism required that humans maintain harmonious collaboration with Nature and, in the case of abuse, led to its rapid collapse [1]

  • This ecological silviculture proposal seems rather simple, but it is likely that problems may arise, so there is a need for the involvement of professionals from various areas of expertise

  • The intelligent agro-silviculture model of the Amazonian Phoenix project, with its rich portfolio of solutions for land use, rehabilitation of degraded areas, protection of forest fragments, and recovery of the Amazonian biome in its environmental services could be inseparable from what we describe as the triggering of multiple production chains and value addition

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Summary

Introduction

Before the dawn of the industrial revolution, extractivism required that humans maintain harmonious collaboration with Nature and, in the case of abuse, led to its rapid collapse [1]. A more inspired and sustainable driver for the Amazonian development will pose economically palatable and ecologically viable solutions, which can lure the agents of destruction into converting to more constructive activities. The seeds of forest species will be the main ingredients of production systems that will allow for the restoration of the degraded ecosystem, in turn recreating considerable portion of its lost environmental services. Associated with restored forest ecosystems, sustainable areas will be set aside where new forms of production for timber, fibers, biofuels, food, etc. All the ecological materials and services generated cannot become economically sustainable without aggregating value to them, so the proposal calls for industrialization of rural areas of Amazonia, which will produce wealth through technology and design, for example, of high grade ecological wood products. We hope to awaken the interest of the scientific and technological community in collaborating with the development of new technologies in this area that can be used for the recovery of degraded areas in Amazonia and elsewhere in the world

The Production Chain of Composite Materials in the Amazonian Phoenix Project
Polymer Composites Containing Natural Plant Fibers
Study Plan of the Composites Group of the Amazonian Phoenix Project
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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