Government data released on Friday revealed a 30% decrease in deforestation across Brazil’s Amazon rainforest in February compared to the previous year.
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s administration strives to fulfill a commitment to eliminate illegal deforestation by 2030.
According to initial satellite data from the space research agency INPE, approximately 226 square km (87 square miles) of the world’s largest rainforest was cleared last month.
This reduction marks a significant decline from the record 322 square km deforested during the same period the previous year. However, the figures still surpass the month’s nine-year average of 173 square km.
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“We must be especially carefully interpreting data from January and February, but the trend is still the same we had been seeing in 2023: a drop in Amazon deforestation, an increase in Cerrado deforestation,” said WWF-Brasil’s strategy director Mariana Napolitano, citing the rising threat to one of the world’s most biodiverse savannas.