The Amazon forest nears a 'point of no return' after losing 13 percent of its area in Brazil in the past 40 years

The Amazon forest nears a 'point of no return' after losing 13 percent of its area in Brazil in the past 40 years

Brazil's Amazon rainforest has shrunk by an area as big as Spain over four decades and is nearing a dangerous tipping point, according to monitoring data released Monday.

The Amazon was approaching a "point of no return" of 20 to 25 percent vegetation loss at which it "ceases to sustain itself as a rainforest," said Bruno Ferreira, a researcher at the MapBiomas monitoring platform.

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