Deforested area in the Amazon rainforest in Brazil 2000-2023
In 2023, the deforested area in the Legal Amazon region in Brazil amounted to nearly 9,000 square kilometers. Just two years earlier, the Legal Amazon's deforestation rate reached the highest level in 15 years, after more than 13,000 square kilometers had been destroyed. The Legal Amazon is an area of more than five million square kilometers comprising nine Brazilian states.
What is behind the growing Amazon deforestation in Brazil?
Illegal logging, expansion of agricultural areas for soybean cultivation, and an increase in wildfire outbreaks are all among the leading causes of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon. Politics, however, has also played an important role. Despite promises to slow down the annually deforested area by the end of his term, President Jair Bolsonaro and his government have been heavily criticized for loosening environmental restrictions and constraining the work of regulatory agencies since taking office in 2019. Nevertheless, the problem is not limited to one single administration. For example, the authorized budget for Brazil’s Ministry of the Environment has been on a mostly downward trend since 2013, when it reached a decade-long peak of nearly seven billion Brazilian reals.
How big is the Brazilian deforestation issue?
In 2023, Brazil registered by far the largest area of primary forest loss in the world, amounting to more than one million hectares. This was roughly the same area as the remaining top nine countries combined. As the country with the second-largest forest area worldwide, these developments are cause for concern amidst the conversation on climate change mitigation. With the global tree cover loss annually increasing, and the emission of greenhouse gases from forest areas along with it, reaching net-zero emissions targets by 2050 grows ever more challenging.