The Americas | Falling felling

Brazil and Colombia are curbing destruction of Amazon rainforest

Tree loss in South America fell by almost a quarter in 2023, compared with the year before

A deforested area on indigenous Xokleng land, illegally used by settlers to plant pine trees, in José Boiteux, Santa Catarina state, Brazil.
Photograph: Getty Images
|Saõ Paulo

Last year, South America lost around 20,000 square kilometres of mature tropical forest—equivalent to an area roughly the size of Wales, or three times the size of the state of Delaware. These swathes of forest host some of the planet’s highest levels of biodiversity. They capture and store carbon more efficiently than any other environment. In one sense, 2023 was merely another step along a grim, familiar path—South America has lost 30% of its primary forest cover since 2001.

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This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline “Falling felling”

From the April 13th 2024 edition

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