In the Amazon Amazon rainforest, called the 'Lungs of the Earth', the beef and soybean industry is being identified as one of the wildfires, with forest fires continuing for three weeks.

Zaire Boussonaru's commitment to Amazon development Since the launch of the Brazilian government, wildfires have increased significantly in the Amazon, raising international concerns.

Brazil was the world's largest beef exporter, exporting 1.64 million tons last year.

According to the Brazilian Beef Exporters Association, China is the largest importer and Egypt and the European Union are also major customers.

In the last 20 years, beef exports and exports have increased nearly tenfold.

Homulo Batista, an international environmental researcher, says the vast animal industry is the main cause of the devastation of the Amazon, and 65 percent of the forests that have disappeared on the Amazon are used for grazing.

AFP also says beans, another major crop in Brazil, are another major cause of devastating jungles.

Soybean cultivation in Brazil exploded with the introduction of migrant farmers in the 1970s and the development of crop cultivation techniques and pesticides.

According to the Brazilian Ministry of Economic Affairs, soybean exports were 83.3 million tons last year, up 22.2% from last year.

The largest customer of Brazilian beans is China.

Chinese soybean imports increased nearly 30 percent last year as China changed its imports during the US-China trade war.

Bloomberg says the wildfires that destroy the Amazon rainforest seem unrelated to the US-China trade war, but are more closely linked than they think.

China imports 30 to 40 million tons annually from the United States, but has bought 71 million tons in Brazil for one year since April this year after the trade war.

This is equivalent to Brazil's total soybean exports in 2014.

China's investment in new farmland is increasing as China's trade war has reduced its dependence on agricultural imports to the United States and has focused on Latin American markets.

6.5% of the land reclaimed on Amazon is used as farmland, and in 2006, the soybeans' share of land has been decreasing, with measures to stop the purchase of soybeans produced at newly cleared forests.

Batista says that since 2008, less than 2 percent of farmland planted soybeans where forests have disappeared.

However, the Serra Savannah region, the second-largest forest after the Amazon rainforest, is being developed as a soybean plantation.

Regulating the Amazon region has led to the development of other tropical rainforests, like the balloon effect.

According to the Brazilian Institute for Environmental and Renewable Natural Resources, forest fires in the Amazon rainforest from early this year to the 19th of this year were 72,800, up 83 percent from the same period last year.

Bloomberg says many wildfires appear to be caused by droughts or intentional human behavior, and it is difficult to determine exactly who is responsible, but China's growing soybean imports can thwart efforts to stop forest development.

When the fire threatens the destruction of the Amazon, President Boussonaru says he will use military forces to evolve forest fires and crack down on environmental damage.