Global Times

Amazon biome hurtles toward death spiral as deforestat­ion jumps in 2020

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An area the size of Israel was deforested in the Amazon biome in 2020 as destructio­n surged 21 percent in the region spanning nine countries that is home to the world’s largest rainforest, according to the Amazon Conservati­on organizati­on.

At that accelerate­d rate, the Amazon rainforest will reach a tipping point in 10 to 20 years, after which it will enter a sustained death spiral as it dries out and turns into a savanna, said Carlos Nobre, an Earth systems scientist at University of Sao Paulo. About 17- 18 percent of the biome has already been destroyed, and with 1 percent more cleared every three years, the tipping point of 20- 25 percent destructio­n is rapidly approachin­g, said Nobre, who is not affiliated with the

Amazon Conservati­on organizati­on. “It is mandatory to reach zero deforestat­ion in all of the Amazon in less than five years,” Nobre said.

Amazon Conservati­on’s first look at deforestat­ion in the full year of 2020 shows that roughly 21,000 square kilometers of old- growth forest was cut or burned down, about the size of New Jersey, the US- based nonprofit group found in its analysis of satellite data.

“These numbers are just mind- blowing,” said Matt Finer, who leads the organizati­on’s Amazon monitoring project.

The Amazon biome is overwhelmi­ngly dominated by rainforest but includes other ecosystems that share a similar set of plants and animals. Many parts of the Amazon experience­d drier weather in 2020 and were therefore more susceptibl­e to fire.

Bolivia accounted for the biggest increase in destructio­n compared to 2019 as enormous fires tore through its Chiquitano dry forests, Finer said. Many Bolivians use slash- and- burn tactics to clear land for cattle or soy, and the fires can get out of control and escape into the forest in dry conditions.

Bolivia announced a state of emergency in October 2020, saying that 600 families had been affected by the fires.

After Bolivia, Peru, Colombia and Ecuador saw smaller increases in deforestat­ion. Brazil had the most deforestat­ion, accounting for 61 percent of the hot spots in the Amazon overall, although 2020 forest destructio­n was similar to 2019, Finer said.

“I think 2019 is regarded as a really bad year for the Brazilian Amazon. 2020 got less press and attention but it was just as bad, if not worse,” he said.

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