Wednesday 2 April 2025 03:12 GMT

Amazon Deforestation Hits Record Low In February While Degradation Threatens Rainforest


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's National Institute for Space Research (INPE) reported the lowest February deforestation rate in the Amazon since record-keeping began in 2016.

Deforestation dropped to 80.95 square kilometers in February 2025, marking a 64.26% decrease from the 226.51 square kilometers recorded in February 2024. This positive trend contradicts January's alarming figures.

Deforestation surged 68% in January 2025 compared to the same month in 2024, with 133 square kilometers lost. Imazon, a Brazilian monitoring organization, equated this destruction to over 400 football fields cleared daily.

Mato Grosso state led February's forest clearing with 29 square kilometers. Roraima followed with 18 square kilometers, then Pará with 15 square kilometers. The remaining loss occurred across Amazonas, Maranhão, Rondônia, and Acre.

The Cerrado savanna region also showed improvement. February deforestation fell 24% compared to 2024, dropping to 494.05 square kilometers from the previous year's 655.51 square kilometers.



Experts warn that forest degradation presents a growing crisis despite reduced clearing. Degradation soared 497% in 2024 compared to 2023 levels. Scientists recorded 36,379 square kilometers of degraded forest last year-the highest in 15 years.
A Continued Pattern of Deforestation and Environmental Degradation
January 2025 continued this troubling pattern with degradation rates 21 times higher than January 2024. Severe drought and fires drive much of this damage, turning previously humid areas into vulnerable, fire-prone zones.

The Legal Amazon spans nine Brazilian states and covers 59% of the country's territory. This vast region plays a crucial role in global climate regulation and biodiversity conservation.

Brazil's deforestation rates have generally declined since President Lula took office in 2023. This reverses the sharp increases seen during the Bolsonaro administration when environmental enforcement weakened significantly.

Scientists remain concerned about the Amazon 's future. A study from the Amazon Network of Georeferenced Socio-Environmental Information projects potential losses of up to 23.7 million hectares between 2021 and 2025.

The world's largest rainforest faces multiple threats. Cattle ranching drives most deforestation, followed by agriculture, mining, and illegal activities. Researchers warn that continued forest loss could push the ecosystem past a tipping point.

Brazil's success in combating deforestation represents a critical step for global climate stability, though the fight against degradation demands immediate attention.

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