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Amazon deforestation rose 17pc in ‘dire’ 2020

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ANASTASIA MOLONEY


Deforestation in the Amazon, the world’s largest rainforest, rose by 17 per cent last year, with wildfires, production and logging causing forested areas roughly the size of El Salvador to disappear, according to new data published on Wednesday.


The loss of primary forest — the clearing of old-growth, intact forest for the first time — hit its third-highest annual total on record since 2000, reaching 2.3 million hectares in the nine countries spanned by the Amazon.


“2020, the year dominated by Covid-19, turned out to be quite dire for the Amazon,” said Matt Finer, who leads an Amazon satellite monitoring project called MAAP for US-based Amazon Conservation, a nonprofit that issued a report containing the data.


Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru recorded historically high deforestation levels, while Brazil had “another bad year”, losing over 1.5 million hectares of primary forest, said Finer. After Brazil, the countries with the highest primary Amazon forest loss in 2020 were Bolivia, Peru and Colombia — which suffered its second-highest loss on record — followed by Venezuela and Ecuador, according to the report based on analysis of the data produced by the University of Maryland.


“The primary cause of deforestation across the Amazon appears to be agriculture and cattle-related, ranging from larger-scale operations in Brazil to the accumulation of smaller-scale clearings throughout the western Amazon,” Finer told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. In Brazil, deforestation was largely driven by forest being converted into pasture for cattle, the report said.


Earlier this month, Brazil’s environment minister told local media he wanted $1 billion in foreign aid from countries including the United States to help curb Amazon deforestation. Cutting down forests has major implications for global goals to curb climate change, as trees absorb about a third of the planet-warming carbon emissions produced worldwide.


The report noted that the biggest deforestation hotspots in the Amazon were found in southeast Bolivia where fires have raged through its drier Chiquitano and Chaco forests.


Many Bolivians use slash-and-burn tactics to clear land for cattle or soy production, and the fires they set can get out of control and escape into the forest in dry conditions. — Thomson Reuters Foundation


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