Rio de Janeiro, Europe Brief News – Brazil recorded the most deforestation ever in the Amazon rainforest, according to government data.
Destruction continues to worsen over the past six months, despite the government’s recent pledges to bring it under control.
Some 3,988 square kilometres (1,540 square miles) of land were cleared in the region between January and June.
The Amazon plays an essential role in the planet’s oxygen and carbon dioxide cycles, absorbing vast amounts of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.
Environmentalists blame the increasing levels of deforestation on Brazil’s right-wing president, Jair Bolsonaro, who has rolled back environmental protections.
Brazil’s environment ministry said it had been forceful in fighting environmental crimes, although in a statement it failed to mention the spike in deforestation.
The Amazon is the world’s largest rainforest, but its trees are felled for their wood and to clear space for crops that in turn supply global food companies.
The high level of deforestation is also feeding a higher than usual number of fires for this time of year, Dr Manoela Machado from the University of Oxford told Reuters news agency.
After trees are cut down, fires are often set in order to clear the land for agriculture, so more deforestation means more fires, Dr Machado said.
As well as being rich in biodiversity, the area is home to communities who say they need to use the forest for mining and commercial farming in order to make a living.
At the same time, indigenous communities living in the Amazon fight to protect the rainforest and their ways of life.