amazon rainroferst fire research

Record-breaking 2024 Amazon fires drive unprecedented carbon emissions and ecosystem degradation

amazon rainroferst fire research
Figure 1. (a) Pan-Amazon Tropical Moist Forest (TMF) Disturbances (2001–2024), including deforestation (dark grey), small-scale degra- dation (orange), and large-scale degradation (dark red) from the TMF. Burned forest area (red line) represents THE GWIS thermal anomalies overlapping with TMF historical degradation and 2023–2024 TMF disturbances, where THE GWIS detected the fire in the same or previous year. CREDIT: RESEARHCER

A new study by researchers at the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre reveals that the Amazon rainforest has just undergone its most devastating forest fire season in over two decades, which triggered record-breaking carbon emissions and exposed the region’s growing ecological fragility despite a slowing trend in deforestation.

The 2024 fires released an estimated 791 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, which roughly equates to the annual emissions of Germany. This marks a sevenfold increase from the average of the previous two years.

According to the study published today in Biogeosciences, 3.3 million hectares of Amazon forest were impacted by fires last year alone. This extraordinary surge in fire activity is likely driven by a combination of extreme drought stress exacerbated by climate change, forest fragmentation, and land-use mismanagement (e.g., escape fires or criminal fires by land grabbers), leading to significant forest degradation. For the first time in the analysis covering 2022–2024, fire-induced degradation has overtaken deforestation as the primary driver of carbon emissions in the Amazon.

This research draws on a sophisticated satellite-based methodology that overcomes many of the limitations of previous global fire datasets. By combining data from the Tropical Moist Forest monitoring system with the Global Wildfire Information System and filtering out false signals caused by agricultural fires or cloud cover, scientists were able to detect and verify fire-driven forest degradation with a novel level of precision.

The geographical spread of the fires was equally alarming. In Brazil, 2024 marked the highest level of emissions from forest degradation on record. In Bolivia, fires affected over 9% of the country’s remaining intact forest cover, which is a dramatic blow to a region that has historically served as a vital biodiversity reservoir and carbon sink.

amazon rainforest graph1
(b) Tropical Moist Forest Map: large-scale TMF 2024 forest degradation and recent country forest disturbances (legend and units as in panel (a)). The inset shows Landsat-8 imagery (courtesy of the US Geological Survey USGS/NASA), with burn scars in purple and undis- turbed forest in green (21 October 2024; RGB: bands 6, 5, 4). The Pan-Amazon region from Eva and Huber (2005) comprises the regions “Amazonia stricto sensu” and “Guiana”. Figures A1–A3 provide further details regarding TMF-GWIS data integration and absolute and/or relative forest disturbances at the country level. CREDIT: RESEARHCER

To ensure scientific rigor and transparency, the researchers used a Monte Carlo simulation framework to estimate carbon emissions and their uncertainties. across variables such as above-ground biomass density, combustion completeness, and the percentage of forest cover affected by fire. The resulting confidence intervals adhere to Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) best practices and offer a robust benchmark for tracking the carbon consequences of forest fires in tropical regions.

While past reports have highlighted the dangers of deforestation, this study spotlights a more insidious threat: fire-driven degradation that erodes forest integrity without necessarily clearing it. Degraded forests may look intact from above, but they lose a significant portion of their biomass and ecological function. Unlike clear-cut areas, these degraded forests often fall through the cracks of national accounting systems and international policy frameworks.

The study calls for immediate and coordinated action to reduce fire use, strengthen forest protection policies, and support local and Indigenous stewardship efforts. It also highlights the need for enhanced international climate finance mechanisms that recognize and address forest degradation, not just deforestation.