Avaliação da distribuição de empreendimentos potencialmente poluidores e do uso de mapas de áreas prioritárias, no processo de licenciamento ambiental do Estado de São Paulo, entre os anos de 2000 e 2015
Resumo
The loss of biodiversity is one of the worst crises in the current world. Brazil is responsible for
the management of a high biodiversity; the Brazilian State recognizes the value of this diversity
and tries to preserve it through environmental legislation. Starting with the Law 6.938 / 1981
(the National Environment Policy - NEP) Brazil established legal and technical instruments that
help to control environmental impacts resulting from anthropic activities. In a context of high
biological diversity living side by side with economic activities of high environmental impact,
and after more than three decades of establishing the NEP, this research has proposed to
evaluate how the environmental licensing process dialogues with other NEP instruments,
among them, the determination of priority areas for conservation in the State of São Paulo. To
do so, a survey of Environmental Impacts Assessment (EIA) submitted to the Environmental
Company of the State of São Paulo (CETESB) between 2000 and 2015 was carried out and the
location of the proposed enterprises and their distribution in the state of São Paulo was
evaluated. We also evaluated how much these enterprises have overlapped priority areas for
conservation in the State. During the survey, 370 EIAs were submitted, the majority presented
between 2007 and 2010, from which 254 were approved. The alcohol and sugar mills were the
most numerous enterprises, followed by utilities, housing estates and mining enterprises. It was
possible to obtain the geographic coordinates of 168 enterprises, and distribution patterns were
found according to the type of activity, with alcohol and sugar mills occupying the center/north
of the State, utilities with less aggregate distribution, housing in the metropolitan region of São
Paulo and the mining activities are located more to the southeast of the State.The distance of
natural resources varied according to the type of enterprise, with an average of 1322 meters of
water resources, 834 meters of remaining forest and 15,867 meters of Conservation Units.
Through the analysis of the enterprise overlapping priority areas for conservation, it was
verified that even after the publication of the maps and their reception by the legislation, 19
presented intention to be installed in these areas. In the analysis of the EIA and the processes
of request of Previous License, it was observed that the maps have been mentioned,
nevertheless, the context of use is, in general, directed to the environmental compensation and
mitigation of impacts, and not for prevention of the possible damages arising from the
installation of these ventures in these areas. The distribution pattern of the projects, their
proximity of natural resources and the overlapping with priority areas, in the context of high
degradation of the ecosystems of the State of São Paulo, demonstrates the need to give greater
importance to the cumulative effects of the projects and the analysis of locational alternatives
in EIAs to support the decision-making process. The high rate of prior license issuance indicates
that the licensing process is still flawed and relies heavily on the prospect of mitigation and
compensation for damages rather than preventing them from happening,