top of page
cover.jpg

Record Decrease In Brazil Deforestation In 2024: Report May 15, 2025

  • Writer: Ana Cunha-Busch
    Ana Cunha-Busch
  • May 14
  • 2 min read

Aerial view of an area of Amazon rainforest deforested by illegal fire in the municipality of Labrea, Amazonas State, Brazil, taken on August 20, 2024. © Evaristo Sa, AFP
Aerial view of an area of Amazon rainforest deforested by illegal fire in the municipality of Labrea, Amazonas State, Brazil, taken on August 20, 2024. © Evaristo Sa, AFP

By AFP - Agence France Presse


Record Decrease In Brazil Deforestation In 2024: Report


Deforestation slowed in all of Brazil's nature biomes for the first time in six years in 2024, according to a report issued months before the country hosts a major UN climate conference.


The total area deforested in South America's biggest country was 32.4 percent lower than in 2023, some 1.24 million hectares, the report by monitoring agency MapBiomas said Thursday.


It was the second year in a row of lower deforestation, with 2023 also recording a drop of 11 percent from the previous year.


Leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has pledged to eradicate illegal deforestation by 2030, and wants to make Brazil a leader in the fight against global warming -- in which carbon-absorbing forests play a key role.


Yet despite the advances, Brazil still lost about 3,403 hectares of native vegetation -- more than 8,000 football fields -- daily in 2024.


Brazil is home to six biomes, each with its own climate, vegetation, and animal life: the Amazon, the Atlantic Forest, the Cerrado, the Caatinga, the Pantanal, and the Pampa.


In the Amazon, the largest tropical rainforest on the planet, logging destroyed an average of 1,035 hectares daily, or "about seven trees per second," the report said, mostly to clear land for agriculture.


The Cerrado, a tropical savanna rich in biodiversity, was the biome most affected by clearing for the second year in a row, losing 652,197 hectares -- an area similar in size to the megacity of Sao Paulo.


Two-thirds of Indigenous lands recorded no deforestation in 2024, said the report.


Deforestation is the intentional destruction of vegetation, and does not include forest fires, which reached record levels in Brazil last year, fueled by extreme heat and drought worsened by climate change.


COP30, the next round of UN climate talks, is due to take place in the Amazonian city of Belem in November.


ll/app/mlr/des

 
 
 

Comments


 Newsletter

Subscribe now to the Green Amazon newsletter and embark on our journey of discovery, awareness, and action in favor of the Planet

Email successfully sent.

bg-02.webp

Sponsors and Partners

Your donation makes a difference. Help Green Amazon continue its environmental awareness, conservation, and education initiatives. Every contribution is a drop in the ocean of sustainability.

logo-6.png
LOGO EMBLEMA.png
Logo Jornada ESG.png
Logo-Truman-(Fundo-transparente) (1).png
  • Linkedin de Ana Lucia Cunha Busch, redatora do Green Amazon
  • Instagram GreenAmazon

© 2024 TheGreenAmazon

Privacy Policy, ImpressumCookies Policy

Developed by: creisconsultoria

monkey.png
Donate with PayPal
WhatsApp Image 2024-04-18 at 11.35.52.jpeg
IMG_7724.JPG
bottom of page