- Brazil’s Amazon rainforest has experienced its largest blazes on record in the first four months of the year, with the environmental workers union placing partial blame on lower government spending on firefighting.
- Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has staked his international reputation on protecting the Amazon rainforest and restoring Brazil as a leader on climate policy.
- The Amazon, the world’s largest rainforest, is vital to curbing catastrophic global warming because of the vast amount of greenhouse gas it absorbs.
- A record drought in the Amazon rainforest region, driven by the El Nino climate phenomenon and global warming, has helped contribute to dry conditions fueling fires this year.
- Roraima, the northern Amazon state that was hit the hardest by the fires.
| Amazon Fund and Prevention EffortsFires in the Amazon generally do not occur naturally but are ignited by people, often seeking to clear land for agriculture.This year’s budget for the environmental agency Ibama to fight fires is 24% lower than in 2023. The Amazon fund, which draws on donations from foreign governments, put 405 million reais ($79.4 million) toward firefighting. Prevention efforts, such as raising awareness about ignitions, creating firebreaks in strategic areas, and conducting prescribed burns, depend on employing people with stable conditions. |
More than 12,000 square kilometres (an area larger than Qatar) of Brazil’s Amazon rainforest burned between January and April, the most in over two decades of data, according to Brazil’s space research agency Inpe.
Dig Deeper: Read about the factors that worsened forest fires in the Amazon since 2029 which destroyed millions of hectares of rainforests.