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Brazil is the leader in beef production, which accounts for 40% of all agriculture-related forest destruction.

According to a new study, beef production accounts for 40% of the?all clearing of forest done to 'open up?spaces for food production.

The study found that Brazil, which is the largest exporter in the world of beef and soya beans, topped the list of nations who have cleared the greatest amount of forest to expand agriculture. Researchers at Chalmers University of Technion in Sweden used satellite data and agricultural statistics combined with a model to study 184 agricultural products across 179 countries between 2001-2022. They produced what they call the most comprehensive global assessment of agriculture-linked?deforestation?todate. The data shows that palm oil accounts for 9% global deforestation. Soybeans are at 5%. Maize and rice each account for 4%. Cassava is at 3%. Cocoa and coffee each make up 2%. Brazil was responsible for nearly a third of the global deforestation (32%) during this period. Indonesia, China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the U.S., and Ivory Coast were all in the top five.

Between 2001 and 2022 121 million hectares (or 299 million acres), of forest was lost, leading to emissions of 41.2 gigatons CO2e.

The study found that staple crops, such as maize, rice, and?cassava, together account for more than 11% of agriculture driven deforestation. This is more than export products, such as cocoa, coffee, and rubber, combined. Their impact is also spread around the world, rather than concentrated on specific regions.

Martin Persson is one of the researchers who worked on the project. He said that the problem "extends" beyond the trade. This means that there are also actions needed in the producer countries where the domestic agricultural markets cause significant forest loss.

The study found that although deforestation is a major source of greenhouse gases, it only accounts for 5% of global carbon dioxide emissions.

Researchers plan to extend the model to the mining and energy sectors.

(source: Reuters)