Current:Home > MarketsWhy Clearing Brazil's Forests For Farming Can Make It Harder To Grow Crops -ProfitSphere Academy
Why Clearing Brazil's Forests For Farming Can Make It Harder To Grow Crops
View
Date:2025-04-15 09:28:34
Millions of acres of Brazil's forest and grasslands have been cleared over the past 30 years to grow soybeans, making the country the world's biggest soybean producer. But the deforestation that facilitated Brazil's soybean boom is now undermining it, bringing hotter and drier weather that makes soybeans less productive, according to two recent studies.
One paper published this week in the journal World Development concluded that hotter temperatures which result from clearing natural vegetation already are costing Brazil's soybean farmers more than $3 billion each year in lost productivity. These local and regional temperature increases are on top of global climate change, which also is intensified as deforestation adds carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.
"This is something that the soybean sector should be taking into consideration in the future," says Rafaela Flach, a researcher at Tufts University and co-author of the study.
This economic harm to the soybean industry from these regional weather changes still is outweighed by the profits that soybean farmers collectively can gain by claiming more land, according to the new study. But Flach and her colleagues say that when this damage is added to other incentives to stop deforestation, such as a possible tax on carbon emissions, the economic argument against deforestation could become compelling.
Brazil grows more than a third of the entire global soybean supply. Its harvest feeds hogs and chickens, and is converted into oil for food products all over the world. Additional areas of the country's forest have been cleared to graze cattle, or for logging and mining.
The harm to soybean harvests from deforestation may not be immediately evident to Brazil's farmers, though, because their soybean yields have actually been rising. This is because of better technology and farming practices. According to the new analysis, those yields would have increased even more in the absence of deforestation.
In another study, published recently in Nature Communications, researchers in Brazil and Germany analyzed rainfall records in the southern Amazon, parts of which have been heavily deforested. They found that rainfall decreased significantly in areas that lost more than half of their tree cover. According to the researchers, continued deforestation would cut rainfall so much that soybean growers in that region would lose billions of dollars worth of soybean production each year.
Brazil is currently in the midst of a drought. Flach says that it is provoking more discussion about whether "this drought is something that we have caused in some way, and how can we stop this from happening in the future." Yet the past year also has seen large areas of land burned or cleared. "There is a disconnect there," Flach says, "but there is a lot of discussion as well."
veryGood! (1164)
Related
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Raven-Symoné's Body Was CGI'd Thinner on That's So Raven, New Book Claims
- Shams Charania replaces mentor-turned-rival Adrian Wojnarowski at ESPN
- Amazon Prime Day 2024: 30% Off Laneige Products Used by Sydney Sweeney, Porsha Williams & More
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Drake Bell Details His Emotional Rollercoaster 6 Months After Debut of Quiet on Set
- When and where to watch the peak of the Draconid meteor shower
- Panera Bread reaches first settlement in Charged Lemonade, wrongful death lawsuits
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Jurors weigh how to punish a former Houston officer whose lies led to murder during a drug raid
Ranking
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- 3 killed when a medical helicopter headed to pick up a patient crashes in Kentucky
- Woman accusing Vince McMahon of sexual abuse asks WWE to waive confidentiality agreements
- Man injured after explosion at Southern California home; blast cause unknown
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Man falls to his death in Utah while canyoneering in Zion National Park
- Oklahoma amends request for Bibles that initially appeared to match only version backed by Trump
- Harris calls Trump ‘incredibly irresponsible’ for spreading misinformation about Helene response
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
2 ex-officers convicted in fatal beating of Tyre Nichols get home detention while 1 stays in jail
ESPN Analyst Troy Aikman Jokes He’s in Trouble for Giving Taylor Swift Nickname During Chiefs Game
Jurors weigh how to punish a former Houston officer whose lies led to murder during a drug raid
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
Sean 'Diddy' Combs' mother defends him amid legal troubles: 'A public lynching of my son'
Supreme Court rejects IVF clinic’s appeal of Alabama frozen embryo ruling
3 killed when a medical helicopter headed to pick up a patient crashes in Kentucky