Amazon Deforestation Falls 50% In Brazil's First Full Year Under New Enforcement
Satellite data show the largest year-on-year drop in Amazon forest loss in two decades, driven by federal action against illegal cattle ranching.
Satellite data from Brazil's national space research institute show that Amazon rainforest loss has fallen by roughly 50 percent over the past twelve months — the sharpest drop recorded in two decades.
The reduction is credited to renewed enforcement against illegal cattle ranching, mining and land clearing, alongside coordinated action by federal environmental agencies previously stripped of funding.
Indigenous-led forest patrols and satellite alerts sent to enforcement officers have been central to the effort. Community mapping projects have identified thousands of previously untracked illegal roads.
The state of Pará, historically responsible for a large share of forest loss, has seen deforestation fall by more than 60 percent. Environmental groups caution that fires and land speculation remain persistent threats.
Scientists have warned for years that the Amazon is approaching a tipping point beyond which it would begin releasing more carbon than it absorbs. The current data offers reason to believe that the point has not yet been passed.
"It is not resolved," one Brazilian ecologist told reporters. "But it is measurably better, and that alone changes what is possible."
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