We handpick and explain the most important stories at the intersection of climate, land, food and nature over the past fortnight. This is an online version of Carbon Briefâs fortnightly Cropped email newsletter. Subscribe for free here. Key developments Forest fund delays and cuts TFFF BEHIND SCHEDULE: Brazilâs flagship forest fund, the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF), is ârunning behind schedule as officials deliberate on how to structure the complex financial vehicleâ in time for COP30, Bloomberg reported. The âambitiousâ fund aims to raise $125bn to help countries protect rainforests âusing investment returns from high-yielding fixed-income assetsâ, it explained. However, the outlet reported that investor events have either not been held or cancelled, while officials are still mulling âpossible structuresâ for the fund. CUTS DEEP: Environmentalists fear that âsweeping spending cuts for forest protectionâ by Argentinaâs âpro-business libertarianâ president, Javier Milei, could endanger the countryâs forests, Climate Home News reported. The impacts of these cuts are âalready becoming evidentâ, contributing to deforestation â particularly in the northern Gran Chaco region, environmentalists told the outlet. According to Argentine government data, the country lost about 254,000 hectares of forest nationwide in 2024. Milei â who has said he wants to withdraw Argentina from the Paris Agreement â faces a âcrucial midterm electionâ in October that could make environmental deregulation even easier, the outlet wrote. BANKING ON THE AMAZON: A new report found that 298 banks around the world âchannelled $138.5bnâ to companies developing new fossil-fuel projects in Latin America and the Caribbean, Mongabay reported. The experts behind the study told the outlet: âSome major banks have adopted policies to protect the Amazon, but these have had little impact, as they do not apply to corporate-level financing for oil and gas companies operating in the Amazon.â Mongabay approached every bank, but only JPMorgan Chase responded, declining to comment. Subscribe: CroppedSign up to Carbon Briefâs free \âCropped\â email newsletter. A fortnightly digest of food, land and nature news and views. Sent to your inbox every other Wednesday. âGreen to greyâ â600 FOOTBALL PITCHESâ: Europe is losing âgreen spaceâŚat the rate of 600 football pitches a dayâ, according to a new, cross-border investigation by the âGreen to Grey Projectâ, the Guardian reported. The outlet â part of the Arena for Journalism in Europe collaboration of journalists and scientists behind the project â added that Turkey accounted for more than a fifth of the total loss in Europe. While nature âaccounts for the majority of the lossesâ, the research showed that the EU is also rapidly building on agricultural land, âwith grave consequences for the continentâs food security and healthâ, it continued. âTWICE AS HIGHâ: Conducted by 40 journalists and scientists from 11 countries, the investigation found that the ânatural areaâ lost to construction in the EU was âtwice as high as official estimatesâ, Le Monde reported. Despite Brussels setting a 2011 target to âreduce the EUâs yearly land takeâ to 800km2 â âmore than 100,000 football fieldsâ â the EU is âartificialising more than 1,000km2 of land per yearâ, it added. KEY DRIVERS: While the âmain drivers of land loss across Europeâ are housing and road-building, Arena for Journalism in Europe found many instances of construction âthat serve only a minority or that are not built based on public needâ, such as luxury tourism sites. Between 2018 to 2023, âan area the size of Cyprusâ in nature and cropland was lost to construction, they added. Researchers who âscrutinised millions of pixels in search of lost natural areasâ found that Finlandâs tourism boom is âencroaching on the last remaining sanctuariesâ in Lapland, another Le Monde story reported. News and views âINTRACTABLEâ OFFSETS: A new review paper found that the failure of carbon offsets to cut emissions is ânot due to a few bad applesâ, but âdown to deep-seated systemic problems that incremental change will not solveâ, the Guardian wrote. Study co-author Dr Stephen Lezak told the outlet: âWe have assessed 25 years of evidence and almost everything up until this point has failed.â The worst of these âintractable problemsâ were with âissuing additional creditsâ for ânon-additionalâ, âimpermanentâ and double-counted projects, the Guardian noted. INSTITUTIONALISING AGROECOLOGY: The Cuban government issued a national decree providing a âmore explicit legal frameworkâ for the implementation of agroecological principles across the country, according to a release from the Caribbean Agroecology Institute. The decree also announced a new national fund for promoting agroecology. YamilĂŠ Lamothe Crespo, the countryâs deputy director of science, innovation and agriculture, âemphasised that agroecology is a model capable of responding to the global climate crisisâ, teleSUR reported. ZERO PROGRESS TO ZERO HUNGER: The world has âmade no improvementâ towards achieving the âzero hungerâ Sustainable Development Goal since it was set in 2015, according to a new report from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. The report said that âongoing geopolitical tensions and weather-related disruptionsâ have contributed to âcontinued instability in global food marketsâ. Separately, a new report from the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit thinktank estimated that a âyearâs worth of breadâ has been lost in the UK since 2020 due to extreme weather impacting wheat harvests, the Guardian reported. MEATLESS MEDIA: More than 96% of analysed climate news stories across 11 (primarily US-based) outlets âmade no mention of meat or livestock production as a cause of climate changeâ, according to analysis by Sentient Media. Sentient, a not-for-profit news organisation in the US, looked at 940 stories to assess the reported causes of greenhouse gas emissions. Around half of the stories included mention of fossil fuels, it said. Covering the report, the Guardian wrote: âThe data reveals a media environment that obscures a key driver of the climate crisis.â FRAUGHT PATH: One-fifth of migratory species âface extinction from climate changeâ, according to a new report by the UNâs migratory species convention, covered by Carbon Copy. The âwarningâ comes as climate change and extreme weather are âaltering their ranges [and] shrinking habitatsâ, the Mail & Guardian wrote. Oceanographic Magazine noted that the North Atlantic right whale is âforced to make migratory detours into dangerous pockets of the oceanâ due to warming seas. Down to Earth reported that the range of Asian elephants is âshifting eastâ in âresponse to anthropogenic land-use and climate changeâ. GOODBYE, GOODALL: Dr Jane Goodall, the groundbreaking English primatologist, died at the age of 91 last week. BBC News noted that Goodall ârevolutionised our understandingâ of chimpanzees, our âclosest primate cousins. The outlet added that she ânever wavered in her mission to help the animals to which she dedicated her lifeâ. CNBC News reported that Goodall followed a vegan diet due to factory farming and the âdamage done to the environment by meat productionâ. She also âencouragedâ others to follow her example, the outlet said. Spotlight What the US government shutdown means for food, forests and climate This week, Carbon Brief explains the US government shutdown â now in its second week â and its implications for food, forests, public lands and climate change. The US federal government shut down at 12:01 eastern daylight time on 1 October, as Congress failed to agree on a bill to keep funding the government and its services. This is the 11th time that the government has shut down in such a fashion; previous shutdowns have lasted anywhere from a few hours to longer than a month. As a result of the shutdown, 750,000 federal employees have been furloughed, or placed on unpaid leave. Others, whose work has been deemed âessentialâ, are working without pay. (A law passed during a shutdown in US president Donald Trumpâs first term guarantees back pay and benefit accrual for furloughed employees. However, the White House has argued that the law does not necessarily guarantee these benefits.) Some agencies have seen close to 90% of their employees furloughed. With a reopening date uncertain, Carbon Brief explored what the shutdown means for food, forests and climate. Food and farming According to the agencyâs âlapse of fundingâ plan, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) planned to furlough about half of its employees for the duration of the shutdown. Among the activities put on hold during the funding lapse are the disbursement of disaster-assistance payments for farmers impacted by extreme weather events. The Farm Service Agency, which oversees these payments, will also not process any new loans during the shutdown, such as those that provide assistance to farmers during the harvest. The Natural Resources Conservation Service, an arm of the USDA with a mission to help private landowners ârestore, enhance and protect forestland resourcesâ, has seen more than 95% of its staff furloughed, effectively halting all conservation efforts within the agency. Certain animal-health programmes â such as the one addressing the highly pathogenic avian influenza outbreak â will continue, but others will shutter for the duration of the funding lapse. Long-term research on animal and plant diseases will also cease. Forests and fires The US Forest Service falls under the purview of the USDA. Employees responsible for âresponding [to] and preparing for wildland firesâ will continue to work during the shutdown; however, âhazardous fuels treatmentsâ â such as prescribed burns or pruning to reduce fuel loads â will be reduced under the agencyâs plan. Furthermore, state grants for fire preparedness and forest management âmay be delayedâ. Work on forest restoration projects may potentially continue âon a case-by-case basisâ, the plan said. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM), a subdivision of the Department of the Interior, will furlough around 43% of its employees, according to its contingency plan. Staff dedicated to fire management will continue to work while âcarryover balancesâ are available, but the number of staff working will be reduced once these funds are exhausted. Climate change and research Across the federal government, most research activities are being put on hold, including conference travel and the issuing of new grants. Grant recipients may continue carrying out research âto the extent that doing so will not require federal staffâ and while funds are available, according to the National Science Foundationâs operational plan. This does not include researchers at federal agencies, such as the Environmental Protection Agency, US Geological Survey and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The funding-lapse plan set out by the Department of Commerce said that NOAA will continue its prediction and forecasting activities, as well as maintain âcritical and mission-relatedâ programmes related to research satellites. However, âmost research activitiesâ will cease. Similarly, NASAâs shutdown plan indicates continuing support for satellite operations, but a pause on research activities â except for those âaligned with presidential prioritiesâ. Watch, read, listen MORAINE DILEMMA: A new PBS documentary walked through ancient Inca paths in the Andes to understand how modern communities are confronting the loss of Peruâs glaciers. SUBSIDISING âEXPLOITATIONâ: A DeSmog investigation revealed how farmers convicted of âexploiting migrant workersâ continue to claim âmillions in taxpayer-funded subsidiesâ. GROUND TRUTHING: A podcast from the Hindu looked back at 20 years of Indiaâs Forest Rights Act, meant to âaddress historic injusticesâ towards the countryâs Indigenous communities. DEEP DIVE MANUAL: Mongabay journalists shared how they investigated Brazilâs shark-meat purchases that were subsequently served in schools, prisons and hospitals. New science The frequency of âeconomically disastrousâ wildfires increased sharply after 2015, with the highest disaster risk in âaffluent, populated areasâ in the Mediterranean and temperate regions |
Science A âstrictly protectedâ forest in Tuscany had maximum summertime temperatures that were, on average, nearly 2C cooler than those of nearby productive forests over 2013-23 |
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology Between 2010 and 2020, the water consumed by global crop-growing increased by 9%, putting âadditional pressure on limited water resourcesâ |
Nature Food In the diary 9-15 October: 2025 World Conservation Congress of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) |
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates 10-17 October: World Food Forum 2025 |
Rome 16 October: World Food Day |
Global 25 October: Ivory Coast presidential election Cropped is researched and written by Dr Giuliana Viglione, Aruna Chandrasekhar, Daisy Dunne, Orla Dwyer and Yanine Quiroz. Please send tips and feedback to [email protected] Cropped 24 September 2025: High Seas Treaty milestone; âErraticâ water cycle; Family food at COP30 Cropped |
24.09.25 Cropped 10 September 2025: Flooded âfood basketsâ; Brazil eyes forest finance; Resilient rice Cropped |
10.09.25 Cropped 27 August 2025: âFrustratingâ Amazon summit; Workplace heat hazards; Record European wildfires Cropped |
27.08.25 Cropped 13 August 2025: Fossil-fuelled bird decline; âDeadlyâ wildfires; Empty nature fund Cropped |
13.08.25 The post Cropped 8 October 2025: US government shutdown; EU loses green space; Migratory species extinction threat appeared first on Carbon Brief. |