The Prague Post - Amazon nears climate 'tipping point' faster than expected

EUR -
AED 4.284396
AFN 81.07174
ALL 97.923424
AMD 446.342825
ANG 2.087696
AOA 1069.636236
ARS 1587.819476
AUD 1.781877
AWG 2.10253
AZN 1.980601
BAM 1.959121
BBD 2.349082
BDT 142.030745
BGN 1.954045
BHD 0.43978
BIF 3432.285488
BMD 1.166452
BND 1.503549
BOB 8.059661
BRL 6.364977
BSD 1.166377
BTN 102.796242
BWP 15.680579
BYN 3.939377
BYR 22862.462383
BZD 2.345676
CAD 1.60894
CDF 3341.885712
CHF 0.937709
CLF 0.028793
CLP 1129.534402
CNY 8.330913
CNH 8.327628
COP 4673.378924
CRC 589.599384
CUC 1.166452
CUP 30.910982
CVE 110.75407
CZK 24.421656
DJF 207.301712
DKK 7.464559
DOP 73.717606
DZD 151.483968
EGP 56.611658
ERN 17.496782
ETB 166.394355
FJD 2.658053
FKP 0.871151
GBP 0.867584
GEL 3.143634
GGP 0.871151
GHS 14.055854
GIP 0.871151
GMD 83.98404
GNF 10101.475394
GTQ 8.946164
GYD 244.013608
HKD 9.099435
HNL 30.795784
HRK 7.53575
HTG 152.55859
HUF 393.405237
IDR 19197.469688
ILS 3.917634
IMP 0.871151
INR 102.740581
IQD 1528.052333
IRR 49049.313231
ISK 143.588091
JEP 0.871151
JMD 186.155538
JOD 0.827036
JPY 172.647166
KES 151.036877
KGS 101.991154
KHR 4671.640727
KMF 493.991504
KPW 1049.786062
KRW 1622.249187
KWD 0.356724
KYD 0.971947
KZT 629.847606
LAK 25300.34735
LBP 104464.537679
LKR 352.377287
LRD 235.681863
LSL 20.658236
LTL 3.44423
LVL 0.705575
LYD 6.310437
MAD 10.550612
MDL 19.513075
MGA 5219.873597
MKD 61.634472
MMK 2448.542671
MNT 4194.840679
MOP 9.372687
MRU 46.635202
MUR 53.714802
MVR 17.95847
MWK 2026.127254
MXN 21.832328
MYR 4.931179
MZN 74.538104
NAD 20.657539
NGN 1792.288904
NIO 42.926063
NOK 11.706753
NPR 164.473787
NZD 1.984386
OMR 0.448493
PAB 1.166277
PEN 4.127488
PGK 4.937006
PHP 66.813261
PKR 328.76452
PLN 4.253458
PYG 8424.279341
QAR 4.246816
RON 5.076868
RSD 117.182724
RUB 94.478585
RWF 1686.689827
SAR 4.37669
SBD 9.600592
SCR 16.757855
SDG 700.460273
SEK 10.991065
SGD 1.502315
SHP 0.916648
SLE 27.19412
SLL 24459.916251
SOS 666.633837
SRD 45.318414
STD 24143.204704
STN 24.932915
SVC 10.205298
SYP 15165.856031
SZL 20.65747
THB 37.641288
TJS 10.975103
TMT 4.082583
TND 3.363756
TOP 2.731951
TRY 48.01663
TTD 7.900391
TWD 35.835714
TZS 2911.571887
UAH 48.256195
UGX 4120.985162
USD 1.166452
UYU 46.679122
UZS 14493.167679
VES 174.12897
VND 30779.756435
VUV 140.076511
WST 3.104884
XAF 657.07075
XAG 0.028215
XAU 0.000326
XCD 3.152395
XCG 2.101963
XDR 0.813048
XOF 652.631658
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.123665
ZAR 20.61824
ZMK 10499.47315
ZMW 27.738017
ZWL 375.59712
  • RBGPF

    -5.4700

    71.48

    -7.65%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    14.57

    +1.51%

  • CMSD

    0.1350

    23.765

    +0.57%

  • BCC

    -1.5550

    84.225

    -1.85%

  • CMSC

    0.0664

    23.725

    +0.28%

  • GSK

    0.5100

    39.47

    +1.29%

  • RIO

    0.5610

    62.451

    +0.9%

  • NGG

    0.5700

    68.55

    +0.83%

  • RELX

    0.2250

    45.665

    +0.49%

  • SCS

    0.0350

    16.805

    +0.21%

  • JRI

    0.0110

    13.521

    +0.08%

  • BP

    -0.6450

    34.585

    -1.86%

  • VOD

    -0.0350

    11.685

    -0.3%

  • BTI

    -0.1800

    55.06

    -0.33%

  • BCE

    0.0750

    24.505

    +0.31%

  • AZN

    1.5400

    81.73

    +1.88%

Amazon nears climate 'tipping point' faster than expected
Amazon nears climate 'tipping point' faster than expected

Amazon nears climate 'tipping point' faster than expected

Hammered by climate change and relentless deforestation, the Amazon rainforest is losing its capacity to recover and could irretrievably transition into savannah, with dire consequences for the region and the world, according to a study published Monday.

Text size:

Researchers warned that the results mean the Amazon could be approaching a so-called "tipping point" faster than previously understood.

Analysing 25 years of satellite data, researchers measured for the first time the Amazon's resilience against shocks such as droughts and fires, a key indicator of overall health.

This has declined across more than three-quarters of the Amazon basin, home to half the world's rainforest, they reported in Nature Climate Change.

In areas hit hardest by destruction or drought, the forest's ability to bounce back was reduced by approximately half, co-author Tim Lenton, director of the University of Exeter's Global Systems Institute, told AFP.

"Our resilience measure changed by more than a factor of two in the places nearer to human activity and in places that are driest," he said in an interview.

Climate models have suggested that global heating -- which has on average warmed Earth's surface 1.1 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels -- could by itself push the Amazon past a point of no return into a far drier savannah-like state.

If carbon pollution continues unabated, that scenario could be locked in by mid-century, according to some models.

"But of course it's not just climate change -- people are busy chopping or burning the forest down, which is a second pressure point," said Lenton.

"Those two things interact, so there are concerns the transition could happen even earlier."

Besides the Amazon, ice sheets on Greenland and the West Antarctic, Siberian permafrost loaded with CO2 and methane, monsoon rains in South Asia, coral reef ecosystems, and the Atlantic ocean current are all are vulnerable to tipping points that could radically alter the world as we know it.

- Global fallout -

Deforestation in Brazil has surged since far-right President Jair Bolsonaro took office in 2019, hitting a 15-year high last year.

Scientists reported recently that Brazil's rainforest -- 60 percent of the Amazon basin's total -- has shifted from a "sink" to a "source" of CO2, releasing 20 percent more of the greenhouse gas into the atmosphere over the last decade than it absorbed.

Terrestrial ecosystems worldwide have been a crucial ally as the world struggles to curb CO2 emissions. Vegetation and soil globally have consistently absorbed about 30 percent of carbon pollution since 1960, even as emissions increased by half.

"Savannification" of the Amazon would be hugely disruptive, in South America and across the globe.

Some 90 billion tonnes of CO2 stored in its rainforest -- twice worldwide annual emissions from all sources -- could be released into the atmosphere, pushing global temperatures up even faster.

Regionally, "it's not just the forests that take a hit", said Lenton. "If you lose the recycling of rainfall from the Amazon, you get knock-on effects in central Brazil, the country's agricultural heartland."

Ominously, the new findings marshall data pointing in the same direction.

"Many researchers have theorised that a tipping point could be reached," said co-author Niklas Boers, a professor at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany.

"Our study provides vital empirical evidence that we are approaching that threshold."

- When you're sure, it's too late -

To assess change in the resilience of the rainforest, Lenton, Boers and lead author Chris Boulton from Exeter University analysed two satellite data sets, one measuring biomass and the other the "greenness" of the canopy.

"If too much resilience is lost, dieback may become inevitable -- but that won't become obvious until the major event that tips the system is over," said Boers.

There may be a "saving grace" that could pull the Amazon back from the brink.

"The rainforest naturally has a lot of resilience -- this is a biome that weathered the ice ages, after all," said Lenton.

"If you could bring the temperature back down again even after passing the tipping point, you might be able to rescue the situation."

"But that still puts you in the realm of massive carbon dioxide removal, or geoengineering, which has its own risks."

Just under 20 percent of the Amazon rainforest -- straddling nine nations and covering more than five million square kilometres (two million square miles) -- has been destroyed or degraded since 1970, mostly for the production of lumber, soy, palm oil, biofuels and beef.

J.Marek--TPP