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

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

Tropical forests stop absorbing carbon dioxide during El Niรฑo events. This year could be the worst.
Live Science โ€” 11 July 2026
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El Niรฑo transforms tropical forests from carbon sinks to sources. 2026 could be the worst year yet. This report comes from Live Science. The story ce

Read Full Story at Live Science โ†’
โšก Quickyla Analysis Original editorial context โ€” not sourced from the article above

Why This Matters

The shift of tropical forests from carbon sinks to sources during El Niรฑo events isnโ€™t just an ecological footnoteโ€”itโ€™s a stark reminder that Earthโ€™s climate systems are increasingly operating in uncharted territory. As these forests, which have long buffered humanityโ€™s excess carbon emissions, begin to falter under stress, the feedback loop could accelerate global warming beyond current projections. The implications extend beyond climate science, threatening food security, biodiversity, and the livelihoods of millions who depend on intact forests.

Background Context

Tropical forests have absorbed nearly a third of human-caused carbon dioxide emissions since the Industrial Revolution, acting as critical regulators of the planetโ€™s climate. But their resilience is waning: studies show that during past El Niรฑo eventsโ€”like the devastating 2015-2016 episodeโ€”these forests released more carbon than they absorbed due to droughts, wildfires, and tree die-offs. This year, with El Niรฑo strengthening and global temperatures already at record highs, the risk of a catastrophic carbon pulse is greater than ever.

What Happens Next

If this yearโ€™s El Niรฑo triggers a major carbon release from tropical forests, we may see a temporary spike in atmospheric COโ‚‚ concentrations, making it harder to meet global climate targets. Policymakers will face pressure to prioritize forest protection and restoration, while scientists will race to refine models predicting the timing and scale of these events. The question is no longer whether these forests will falter, but how soonโ€”and whether interventions can mitigate the damage.

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