Tropical forests stop absorbing carbon dioxide during El Niño events. This year could be the worst.

El Niño transforms tropical forests from carbon sinks to sources. 2026 could be the worst year yet.

An aerial view of lush rainforest with cliffsides
Some South American tropical forests effectively stop absorbing carbon during extreme climate events like El Niño. 
(Image credit: F.J. Jimenez via Getty Images)

Tropical forests draw down and store large quantities of CO₂ from the atmosphere. The Amazon rainforest in South America, for example, stores approximately 123 billion tonnes of carbon — more than is stored in any other terrestrial ecosystem in the world. But these forests are facing a critical challenge.

Research from 2023, which was carried out by me and more than 100 colleagues, found that tropical forests in South America are vulnerable to climate extremes. We determined that during an El Niño event, the warm phase of a natural fluctuation in the Earth's climate system, South American tropical forests may fail to act as a carbon sink.

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Amy Bennett
Research Fellow in the School of Geography, University of Leeds

Amy Bennett is a research fellow at the University of Leeds

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