Amazon

Amazon Deforestation at 8-Year Low: A Win for Conservation

By |2025-01-11T14:09:00+00:00January 11th, 2025|

In a startling reversal, a welcome and significant milestone in the fight against climate change has emerged: deforestation in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest has reached its lowest rate in eight years. This development signals meaningful progress in preserving one of the planet’s most vital ecosystems and combating the dire consequences of environmental degradation. 

A Critical Turning Point

The Amazon rainforest, also known as the “Lungs of the Earth,” is critical to preserving global ecological equilibrium. It covers around 5.5 million square kilometres and absorbs large amounts of CO2 while creating oxygen, making it critical to climate change mitigation. However, this essential ecosystem has suffered constant threats from illicit logging, livestock ranching, mining, and agricultural expansion, resulting in worrisome rates of deforestation over the decades.

According to recent data issued by Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE), deforestation rates are down 33% over the previous year. Between August 2023 and July 2024, the Amazon lost about 4,000 square kilometres of forest, the lowest total since 2016. This victory marks a watershed moment in the quest to safeguard the Amazon and provides a ray of hope for worldwide conservation efforts.

The Impact of Policy and Enforcement

Deforestation has decreased significantly as a result of the Brazilian government’s increased commitment to environmental preservation under President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. When President Lula took office in January 2023, he prioritised rectifying his predecessor’s environmentally destructive policies, which had drawn international criticism for eroding environmental laws..

Key measures implemented include:

  • Strengthened Law Enforcement: The government increased funding for environmental enforcement agencies, such as IBAMA (Brazilian Institute of the Environment and Renewable Natural Resources), enabling them to crack down on illegal deforestation activities.
  • Indigenous Land Protections: Efforts to recognize and safeguard Indigenous territories have played a pivotal role, as these areas often serve as natural barriers against deforestation.
  • Global Partnerships: Brazil has also partnered with international organizations and governments, including the European Union and Norway, to secure funding for preservation initiatives. The Amazon Fund, a mechanism that channels resources into sustainable projects, has been revitalized.

Broader Implications

Reduced deforestation benefits not only Brazil but also the rest of the world. By maintaining the Amazon, the world’s biggest rainforest, Brazil helps to mitigate climate change, protect biodiversity, and assist Indigenous groups that rely on the jungle for survival.

However, issues remain. Economic pressures and political opposition from agricultural and mining lobbies continue to pose challenges. To preserve this downward trend in deforestation, sustained efforts will be required on both the domestic and international levels.

Sources and Evidence

  1. Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE): www.inpe.br
  2. Reuters Coverage of Amazon Fund: www.reuters.com
  3. Environmental Defense Fund Report: www.edf.org
  4. Analysis by World Resources Institute (WRI): www.wri.org

The dramatic drop in Amazon deforestation demonstrates the effectiveness of targeted policy measures and international collaboration. As the globe commemorates this accomplishment, it serves as a reminder that collaborative efforts can result in considerable progress towards protecting our planet’s future.

2023 could mark a turning point for the Amazon rainforest

By |2025-01-09T12:14:56+00:00January 1st, 2023|

New political leaders in Brazil and Colombia have promised to protect the rainforest, raising hopes of saving the ecosystem from becoming savannah

From the New Scientist, 31 December 2022

By Luke Taylor

Potaro-river-running-through-the-Amazon

The Potaro river running through the Amazon rainforest in Guyana

After four years of runaway deforestation in the Amazon under Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro, the election of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who takes office on 1 January, could be a decisive turning point.

Lula has pledged to aim for net-zero deforestation – the first Brazilian president to do so. “A standing tree is worth more than thousands of logs,” he said in his victory speech on 31 October. “That is why we will resume the surveillance of the entire Amazon and any illegal activity.”

As well as the restoration of monitoring and surveillance efforts, Lula is proposing several ambitious projects, such as a national climate authority and a sustainable farming scheme. But without a majority in Brazil’s Congress, it is unclear whether he will be able to deliver on these pledges. It will also take time to dislodge the illegal industries that have taken hold in the Amazon, such as gold mining.

Despite the challenges ahead, Lula’s win has made researchers and conservationists more optimistic that the Amazon could be saved, even as there are signs it is hitting a tipping point that would see it transform into savannah. “The election of Lula is a great reason for hope,” says Mark Plotkin, an ethnobotanist and co-founder of non-profit organisation the Amazon Conservation Team.

The impact of Lula’s environmental policy should be magnified by the recent election of eco-conscious governments elsewhere in South America that have campaigned to protect the rainforest.

In Colombia, which is home to some of the Amazon’s most biodiverse regions, President Gustavo Petro is also positioning himself as a regional steward of the rainforest, after taking office in August 2022. Petro is pushing for high-income countries to support South America’s defence of the rainforest and he is also overseeing a total rethink of Colombia’s conservation strategy.

After decades of criminalising farmers who clear the forest for agriculture, the Colombian government now plans to offer them financial support to transition to more sustainable practices, such as harvesting Amazonian fruits from the trees.

The country’s environment minister also proposes diverting all carbon tax revenue directly to conservation schemes and forging an “Amazon Bloc” with other South American nations, so that they will have more leverage to secure international funds.

With Petro, Lula and US president Joe Biden all having been elected after campaigning to protect the Amazon, researchers say they have the political and public support to move forward with plans to conserve and restore the rainforest.

There may also be more opportunities for collaboration between different countries and groups. Bolsonaro blocked conservation in the wider region, not just Brazil, says Martín von Hildebrand, founder of the non-profit organisation Gaia Amazonas. Alliances between NGOs, scientists and Indigenous peoples can now be strengthened and their plans enacted, he says.

Restoring the forest

This could be the year that decades of damage begin to be reversed, says von Hildebrand. The anthropologist is working with researchers and Indigenous communities to draw up a reforestation project that would create a wildlife corridor stretching from the Andes to the Atlantic Ocean. “We’ve been waiting for a long time for political will to implement change and I think we are finally going to get it,” he says.

Carlos Nobre at the University of São Paulo, Brazil, believes that conservationists can capitalise on political support and the growing urgency of climate change to spur efforts towards reforestation.

At the COP27 climate summit in November 2022, Nobre presented a project to restore more than 1 million square kilometres of rainforest that would, he says, “store 1 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide a year for decades to come and prevent the Amazon from reaching a tipping point”.

Though the Amazon’s future remains uncertain, the importance of its conservation for climate change will only become more obvious in 2023, says von Hildebrand.

“It’s not only a carbon sink and a haven of biodiversity, but with its flying rivers [currents of water vapour], it’s a water pump for the entire Amazon, the Andes and beyond,” he says. “The forest is absolutely necessary. If we lose the forest, we simply won’t have water in this part of the world.”

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