So far this year, the rate of deforestation is 48 percent lower than in 2022 and is at levels not seen since 2018.
August was another month of relatively good news for the Amazon rainforest: The rate of deforestation has continued to decline significantly.
Earlier this week, Marina Silva, Brazil’s environment minister, announced a 66.1 percent decrease in Amazon deforestation compared to last August. That amounted to a loss of about 217 square miles, according to Reuters. These figures come during a time of year when destruction of the rainforest is usually quite high, and follows a similar trend seen in July.
So far this year, the rate of deforestation is 48 percent lower than in 2022 and is at levels not seen since 2018. The numbers are another victory for President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who has made protecting the Amazon a policy priority.
“These results show the determination of the Lula administration to break the cycle of abandonment and regression seen under the previous government,” Marina Silva said, according to the BBC.
The Amazon, the world’s largest tropical rainforest, covers some two and a half million square miles — an area roughly twice the size of India. It’s a critical carbon sink for greenhouse gas emissions and home to 20 percent of the world’s fresh water. But deforestation and climate change are degrading the Amazon and its ability to sop up carbon from the atmosphere. Some scientists fear that if deforestation continues, the rainforest could reach a point beyond which it cannot recover and would become a grassy savannah.
The tenure of Lula’s predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro, saw a rollback of environmental regulations and enforcement, and a spike in deforestation. Since taking office in January, Lula has, among other steps, renewed efforts to combat illegal clearing and reactivated the $630 million Amazon Fund, which is aimed at supporting the government’s push to protect the rainforest.
“This shows the importance of governments acting on climate change,” Erika Berenguer, a senior research associate focused on the Amazon at Oxford University, said of the figures released this week. She is currently doing field work in the rainforest, and says the decreasing rate of deforestation is an important signal for voters.
“Often people vote and feel disempowered,” she said. “This shows how an election can change the fate of the Amazon.”
Some scientists, however, prefer to follow the annual rather than monthly deforestation data. “It’s a hopeful story,” said Alexandra Tyukavina, a geographer at the University of Maryland who focuses on tropical forest loss. But she adds that there could be a lag in capturing deforestation via satellite imagery and “there is quite a bit of deforestation happening in the second half of the year.”
While the progress so far has been critical, Berenguer calls it “low-hanging fruit” that largely revolved around getting back to where the country was before Bolsarano. “Then you have to pick the fruit at the top of the trees and it’s much more difficult,” she said. “The question becomes what we do to reduce rates even more from what they were pre-Bolsonaro.”
The Lula administration has set a goal of zero deforestation by 2030. But whether Lula meets that goal, or how close he comes, remains an open question, and there is at least some cause for skepticism. A meeting of Amazon nations early this year, for example, failed to reach an agreement on important barriers to progress, such as deforestation targets and the future of oil and gas development in the rainforest.
“We cannot just give ourselves a pat on the shoulder and be happy about it,” said Berenguer. “We cannot get too comfy.”
The article you site you link was published in and uses numbers from February, when Lula's administration was new and had begun implementation of their policies. Feb 2022 to Feb 2023 saw a 5% increase, but the more recent numbers see a 66% decrease from Aug 2022 to Aug 2023 per the article above.
Machine translation of your article:
Although data were computed only up to February 17, 2023, the month this year recorded a record number of deforestation alerts in the Legal Amazon. The information is from the Terra Brasilis platform, which gathers devastation data detected by satellite. The data was updated on Friday (24).
The tool, developed by the National Institute for Space Research (Inpe), collects alerts and monitors deforestation in the Amazon region since 2015 – with data for the first half of the year only starting to be computed in 2016.
According to the platform, 208.75 km² were recorded only between February 1st and 17th. This number exceeds the monthly accumulated over the full month in the years 2022 (198.67 km²), 2021 (122.8 km²), 2020 (185.73 km²). 2019 (138.08 km²), 2018 (146.32 km²), 2017 (101.23 km²) and 2016 (114.98 km²). Compared to 2022, the growth was 5% in one year.
In the annual accumulated, 2023 registered 375.33 km² devastated. Despite the record in February, the amount accounted for is lower than in previous years. In 2022 in the same period, for example, the Legal Amazon had already detected 629.11 km² devastated.
In 2023, until February 17th, the state that recorded the most deforestation was Mato Grosso. Of the 375.33 km² affected this year, 198.85 km² – that is, 52.98%, more than half – were registered in the state. Next is Pará, with 65.47 km² – with 17.4% of the accumulated annual figure so far.
According to Inpe's tool, deforestation alerts include the degradation of: deforestation with exposed soil, deforestation with vegetation and mining.
I have no opinion on Lula other than he's a lot better than Bolansaro when it comes to the environment. I hope he's good for Brazil.
What i don't understand is, why people from other countries care about Brazil and try to dictacte who should be president and what policy should we go for...
This fucker (lula), has promised to the world that would protect the Amazon, but wants to exctrat petrol from there:
https://www.bbc.com/portuguese/articles/c2lnvljy79lo
And the deflorestation goes on on other parts of the country:
https://www.bbc.com/portuguese/articles/cjkzpkl1e77o