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Can we avert an Amazon tipping point? The economic and environmental costs

Environmental Research Letters
By: , and 

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Abstract

The Amazon biome is being pushed by unsustainable economic drivers towards an ecological tipping point where restoration to its previous state may no longer be possible. This degradation is the result of self-reinforcing interactions between deforestation, climate change and fire. We assess the economic, natural capital and ecosystem services impacts and trade-offs of scenarios representing movement towards an Amazon tipping point and strategies to avert one using the Integrated Economic-Environmental Modeling (IEEM) Platform linked with spatial land use-land cover change and ecosystem services modeling (IEEM + ESM). Our approach provides the first approximation of the economic, natural capital and ecosystem services impacts of a tipping point, and evidence to build the economic case for strategies to avert it. For the five Amazon focal countries, namely, Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Bolivia and Ecuador, we find that a tipping point would create economic losses of US$256.6 billion in cumulative gross domestic product by 2050. Policies that would contribute to averting a tipping point, including strongly reducing deforestation, investing in intensifying agriculture in cleared lands, climate-adapted agriculture and improving fire management, would generate approximately US$339.3 billion in additional wealth and a return on investment of US$29.5 billion. Quantifying the costs, benefits and trade-offs of policies to avert a tipping point in a transparent and replicable manner can support the design of regional development strategies for the Amazon biome, build the business case for action and catalyze global cooperation and financing to enable policy implementation.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Can we avert an Amazon tipping point? The economic and environmental costs
Series title Environmental Research Letters
DOI 10.1088/1748-9326/aca3b8
Volume 17
Year Published 2022
Language English
Publisher IOP Publishing
Contributing office(s) Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center
Description 125005, 12 p.
Country Brazil, Bolivia, Columbia, Ecuador, Peru
Other Geospatial Amazon
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