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Amazon Rainforest Faces Renewed Deforestation Risk as Soy Ban Challenged
17 Nov
Summary
- Powerful farming interests in Brazil push to lift long-standing ban on soy grown on deforested land
- UK retailers and environmental groups warn lifting the ban would be "disaster" for the Amazon
- Ongoing deforestation and climate change already driving the Amazon towards a "tipping point"

In November 2025, the Amazon rainforest faces a renewed threat of deforestation as efforts grow to overturn a long-standing ban on the sale of soy grown on land cleared after 2008. This ban, known as the Amazon Soy Moratorium, has been widely credited with curbing deforestation in the region and is considered a global environmental success story.
However, powerful farming interests in Brazil, backed by a group of politicians, are now pushing to lift these restrictions. They argue the ban is an unfair "cartel" that allows a small group of companies to dominate the Amazon's soy trade. Environmental groups warn that removing the ban would "open the way for a new wave of land grabbing" to plant more soy in the world's largest rainforest.
Scientists say ongoing deforestation, combined with climate change, is already driving the Amazon towards a potential "tipping point" where the rainforest can no longer sustain itself. The UK, a major importer of Brazilian soy, has also voiced strong support for maintaining the moratorium, with 70% of the public backing government action to eliminate deforestation from supply chains.
Despite this, the challenge to the soy ban has even divided the Brazilian government, with the Justice Ministry suggesting potential anti-competitive behavior, while the Environment Ministry and prosecutors defend the moratorium. As Brazil prepares to open a major new railway into the Amazon, the pressure to lift the restrictions continues to grow.



