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Data InsightsDeforestation is no longer inevitable

Deforestation is no longer inevitable

Changes in forest area by world region since 1990. A world map overlaid with vertical bars and point markers showing forest area in 1990 and in 2025 for each region. Key values and trends: North and Central America 7.7 to 7.8 million km², slight increase; South America 10.3 to 8.5 million km², decrease of about 1.8 million km²; Europe 10.0 to 10.4 million km², increase; Africa 7.8 to 6.6 million km², decrease; Western, Central, and East Asia 2.6 to 3.4 million km², increase; South and Southeast Asia 3.2 to 2.9 million km², decline; Oceania 1.8 to 1.8 million km², no change. Data source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Global Forest Resources Assessment (2025). License: CC BY.

In the past, forests around the world were cut down on a massive scale. We lost some of the world’s richest ecosystems.

In recent decades, the picture has become more complex. Deforestation has not ended, but it is no longer happening everywhere. Since 1990, some regions have continued to lose large areas of forest, while others have slowed this long-run trend — and even reversed it.

The map shows regional changes in forest area based on the latest data from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Deforestation has been particularly large in South America and Africa. At the same time, the forested area has expanded in Europe, North and Central America, and large parts of Asia. These gains show that deforestation is not inevitable. When pressure on land falls, forests can return.

I previously wrote about why deforestation is happening, and what we can do to bring the long history of deforestation to an end.

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