The Brazilian government has violated its own constitution and international law by developing hydroelectric power plants in the Amazon, according to an indigenous leader due to address the 29th Un

Amid the jungle cacophony of rustling leaves, buzzing bugs, howling monkeys and shrieking parrots, another, more menacing sound can be heard: a revving engine and the crush of truck tires that coul

Nature threads the very fabric of human lives in remote forest areas of developing countries. Unfortunately, we do not fully understand how ecosystem services (such as human health benefits) could be secured by conserving natural capital. Thus, we analyze a rich dataset on disease, climate, demography, land uses, and conservation policies in the Brazilian Amazon. Unsurprisingly, we find that the health dividends vary across conservation policies and are small relative to the overall burden of these diseases.

Who said large-scale hydropower was out?

China has accelerated plans for a railway through the heart of the Amazon rainforest - prompting fury from environmentalists.

Food retailers such as McDonald’s, Krispy Kreme, Dunkin Donuts, as well as agribusinesses like Cargill, are among the big companies to recently make zero-deforestation pledges.

Colombia's armed forces have arrested 59 people in a major crackdown on illegal mining in the Amazon.

The Brazilian rainforest could be effectively nationalised under a draft bill being considered by the country’s MPs.

Four Amazonian tribes have joined forces to oppose the construction of hydroelectric dams in their territory as the Brazilian government ramps up efforts to exploit the power of rivers in the world

The vast tropical forests of Amazonia account for almost one-fifth of the world's terrestrial vegetation carbon stock

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