Working to conserve priority areas in the Amazon, Cerrado, Atlantic Forest and the ocean

 
 

With offices in Rio de Janeiro, Brasília and Santarém, Conservation International-Brazil works to protect the most important natural areas in South America's largest country — including the Amazon rainforest, the Cerrado savanna and the Abrolhos seascape.

Using the latest science and leveraging partnerships with Indigenous communities and business leaders, Conservation International-Brazil's multidisciplinary team has scored a number of successes, including the protection of some 45 million hectares (111 million acres) of native ecosystems and the establishment of a trust fund to support the forest-dwelling Kayapó people.

Conservation International-Brazil's mission is to support sustainable development, promote environmental education and protect nature for human well-being.

 

Highlight project

Essequibo River, the longest river in Guyana, and the largest river between the Orinoco and Amazon.
© Pete Oxford/iLCP

Amazon Sustainable Landscapes project

No ecosystem on Earth boasts a wider variety of plant and animal species than the Amazon rainforest. But this vital ecosystem is rapidly shrinking due to ever-increasing demand for farm and pasturelands and infrastructure, such as roads.

Conservation International-Brazil — in partnership with the Brazilian Ministry of Environment, the Global Environment Facility, the World Bank and the Brazilian Biodiversity Fund — aims to reverse this trend through its Amazon Sustainable Landscapes project, which creates new protected areas of forest, strengthens existing protected areas and supports the adoption of sustainable agricultural practices.

The largest tropical reforestation effort in the world, the Amazon Sustainable Landscapes project intends to reforest 12 million hectares (29.6 million acres) of land by 2030.

 

Where we work in Brazil

 

News from Brazil

Amid a deforestation crisis, two countries plant seeds of hope

© Flavio Forner

Earth lost 3.7 million hectares (9.2 million acres) of tropical forest last year, an area nearly the size of the Netherlands, according to new data from the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the University of Maryland.

Yet amid these sobering findings, there are signs of hope: Two countries are bucking worldwide trends — and proving that effective laws and governance can stem the decline of forests.

In Brazil, primary forest loss dropped by 36 percent between 2022 and 2023, while in Colombia deforestation nearly halved.  

Researchers called the steep declines in both countries “remarkable,” Haley Ott reported for CBS News. They show that where there’s a will there’s a way. 

In Brazil and Colombia researchers attributed the progress to leadership changes that have prioritized the environment. In Brazil, President Inácio Lula da Silva has pledged to end deforestation. And in Colombia, President Gustavo Petro Urrego is putting an emphasis on environmental reforms.

However, despite the good news in the data, the overall “rate of tropical primary forest loss in 2023 remained stubbornly consistent,” the WRI cautioned, pointing to alarming increases in deforestation in Bolivia, Laos and Nicaragua. Altogether, an average of 10 football fields worth of forest are cut down globally every minute, according to the data. 

Deforestation is a major cause of climate-warming greenhouse gases, second only to fossil fuel emissions.

“There are just six years remaining until 2030, by which time leaders of 145 countries promised to halt and reverse forest loss,” WRI said in its report. “While the declines in forest loss in Brazil and Colombia show promise towards that commitment, it’s clear that the world is falling far short of its targets.”

A Conservation International study on what drives deforestation — and what’s proven to stop it — offers a roadmap for policymakers to help reach these targets.

It distilled findings from 320 peer-reviewed studies —and the science is clear: Of all the methods proven to prevent deforestation, protected areas, such as national parks and wilderness preserves, are the most effective. Currently about 17 percent of the planet’s lands are conserved, but study author Jonah Busch said that location matters.

“Protected areas are a tried-and-true way of conserving nature and curbing the climate crisis,” he said. “However … to really help mitigate climate change, protected areas must be in the right places.”

That means areas where the threat of deforestation is highest — such as areas with higher populations and greater proximity to cities and roads.

Additionally, the study found that deforestation rates in Indigenous territories or lands managed by Indigenous peoples are consistently low, either due to traditional land-management practices that favor forests, or because Indigenous lands tend to be in remote areas and less likely to be converted to agriculture.

Agriculture is the number one driver of deforestation in the tropics, in short, because it’s a moneymaker. The cutting and burning of forests to clear the way for livestock and crops is responsible for 90 percent of all tropical deforestation.

“Forests are one of our best defenses against climate change — but only if they’re left standing,” Busch said.


Further reading:


Mary Kate McCoy is a staff writer at Conservation International. Want to read more stories like this? Sign up for email updates. Also, please consider supporting our critical work.

 

Learn more

Hear directly from Conservation International employees on the ground in Brazil, in Portuguese.

 

References

  1. Fedele, G., Donatti, C. I., Bornacelly, I., & Hole, D. G. (2021). Nature-dependent people: Mapping human direct use of nature for basic needs across the tropics. ScienceDirect, 71. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102368
  2. Conservation International (2021, November). Irrecoverable Carbon. Retrieved January 2025, from https://www.conservation.org/projects/irrecoverable-carbon
  3. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. (2024). Table 8a: Total, threatened, and EX & EW endemic species in each country [Fact sheet]. https://www.iucnredlist.org/resources/summary-statistics#Summary%20Tables