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Frequent Large-Scale Wildfires Are Turning Forests From Carbon Sinks Into Super‑emitters, Warn Scientists

  • In 2024, satellite data showed tropical forests lost a record 67,000 square kilometers mainly due to intense wildfires, with Brazil and the Amazon hardest hit.
  • The increase was driven by droughts linked to climate change and the El Niño phenomenon, which created an environment that allowed fires to escalate rapidly throughout Latin America.
  • Fires accounted for nearly half of primary forest loss and released an estimated 3.1 billion tonnes of CO2, turning forests from carbon sinks into large-scale emissions sources.
  • Experts like Prof Matthew Hansen called the data 'frightening' and warned of rainforest 'savannisation', while Rod Taylor described a new climate feedback loop amplifying fire intensity.
  • The findings imply urgent need for consistent forest protection policies and political will, as COP30 in the Amazon aims to promote payment schemes rewarding forest conservation.
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Politico Europe broke the news in Brussels, Belgium on Wednesday, May 21, 2025.
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