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Minister says Colombian deforestation will be lowest in 23 years in 2024.

Minister says Colombian deforestation will be lowest in 23 years in 2024.

According to Environment Minister Susana Muhamad, the deforestation rate in Colombia is projected to increase in 2024 compared to the previous year. However, it is still expected to be one of the lowest rates in over two decades.

According to the Environment Ministry, deforestation decreased by over a third, from 1,235 square kilometers to just 792 square km (305 square miles) by 2023.

Muhamad warned last year that 2023's success would not be repeated due to drought and the breakdown of talks with rebels who, according to the government, are fueling illegal logging and road construction, as well as cattle ranching.

Muhamad announced her resignation Sunday, but she has yet to be replaced. She led efforts to reduce deforestation, after the destruction of Colombia's Amazon ecosystem and other ecosystems increased during former President Ivan Duque's administration.

Muhamad said that the figure for 2024 would be the lowest in 23 years.

Muhamad said that her resignation was "irrevocable" over the appointment by President Gustavo Petro of a controversial advisor.

Muhamad said that it is too early to speculate about her successor, but she and her team are working to prepare the ground for her successor.

Muhamad is one of Petro's longest-serving cabinet members. She said that she was proudest of her work in deforestation, and the UN COP16 Biodiversity Summit, which took place in Colombia at the end of last year.

The summit concluded with a plan that would charge pharmaceutical companies and other companies who use genetic information for the development and research of new commercial products. However, there was no agreement on how to raise $200 billion in annual conservation funding by 2030.

Muhamad has said that she intends to stay in her position until the conclusion of the biodiversity talks, which will take place in Rome later this month. Reporting by Oliver Griffin Editing and Marguerita Choy

(source: Reuters)