Note: This is an imagined future story, written as if a projected milestone has occurred. It is based on current trends and evidence, not confirmed events.
For the first time in recorded history, Earth’s forests are growing back faster than they are being cut down. Global satellite monitoring networks confirmed in 2030 C.E. that humanity crossed the threshold from net deforestation into net reforestation — a shift that 110 world leaders committed to when they signed the Glasgow Forest Pledge at COP26 in 2021 C.E. The milestone, nine years in the making, marks one of the most consequential reversals in the relationship between human civilization and the natural world.
Key projections
- Net reforestation milestone: Global forest cover is now expanding for the first time on record, with satellite data showing new growth outpacing loss in 14 of the 17 countries that together contain roughly 85% of the world’s forests.
- Glasgow Pledge funding: The nearly $19.2 billion in public and private funds committed at COP26 in 2021 C.E. was ultimately deployed across restoration programs, indigenous land protections, and wildfire response in more than 60 nations.
- Indigenous stewardship: Programs funneling resources directly to Indigenous communities — identified by researchers as among the most effective forest protection strategies — now cover an estimated 400 million acres of previously threatened forest land.
A pledge that almost didn’t hold
When the Glasgow Forest Pledge was announced in November 2021 C.E., experts were cautious. Prof. Simon Lewis of University College London told the BBC at the time that the world “has been here before” — pointing to a 2014 C.E. New York Declaration on Forests that “failed to slow deforestation at all.” Deforestation had actually increased in the years after that earlier pledge.
What made 2030 C.E. different was a combination of political accountability, funding scale, and enforcement tools that the 2014 C.E. agreement lacked. The Glasgow deal included commitments from Brazil, Russia, China, Indonesia, Canada, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the U.S., and the U.K. — countries that collectively hold the majority of the planet’s forested land. Brazil and Russia had not been part of the 2014 C.E. agreement at all.
Crucially, satellite monitoring — the very “spying from satellites” that some nations had bristled at as a sovereignty concern — became the accepted standard for verification. A consortium of space agencies and independent research institutions now provides near-real-time forest cover data, giving funders and civil society the tools to hold governments accountable in ways that were not possible a decade earlier.
What actually changed on the ground
The turnaround did not come from a single policy. It came from dozens of overlapping pressures arriving at once.
In Indonesia — the world’s largest palm oil exporter — a combination of consumer-market pressure from European regulations and domestic policy reform dramatically reduced the conversion of forestland for agriculture. Companies that had committed in 2021 C.E. to remove deforestation from their supply chains faced binding due-diligence laws in major markets. Palm oil, soy, and cocoa buyers could no longer ignore the origin of what they purchased.
In the Amazon, the political climate shifted after 2022 C.E. Brazil’s government moved to restore the environmental enforcement mechanisms that had been weakened in the early 2020s C.E., and the Amazon Fund — which had been suspended in a funding dispute with Norway in 2019 C.E. — was relaunched with expanded contributions. The Congo Basin’s £1.1 billion protection fund, established under the Glasgow Pledge, helped stabilize the world’s second-largest tropical rainforest.
Russia’s vast boreal forests, which alone capture more than 1.5 billion tons of carbon annually, became a focus of improved wildfire suppression and replanting investment — two areas where the Glasgow Pledge’s public funds proved decisive.
The role of Indigenous communities
One of the clearest findings of the decade was that the most cost-effective forest protection happened where Indigenous land rights were secured and resourced. Studies cited at COP26 had already shown this, and the intervening years bore it out at scale.
Portions of the Glasgow Pledge funding flowed directly to Indigenous communities across the Amazon, Congo Basin, and Southeast Asia — not as aid filtered through national governments, but as direct support for land governance, legal recognition, and community monitoring programs. The results were measurable. Forests under secure Indigenous stewardship showed deforestation rates far below the global average throughout the 2020s C.E.
That progress is documented in detail in recent reporting on Indigenous land rights milestones at COP30, which traces how formal legal recognition of Indigenous territories accelerated through the late 2020s C.E.
What remains unfinished
The net reforestation milestone is real, but it requires an honest reading. “Net” means the global total — it obscures the fact that primary old-growth forest loss continues in several regions, replaced on paper by younger plantation growth that stores far less carbon and supports far less biodiversity. Ecologists have been clear that a monoculture pine plantation is not a substitute for a primary rainforest.
The link between meat consumption and deforestation — one of the Glasgow Pledge’s hardest problems — has proven the most resistant to change. Demand for beef raised on cleared land remains high in many markets, and while the most egregious supply chains have been cleaned up under due-diligence regulations, enforcement at the farm level remains patchy. Dr. Nigel Sizer, former president of the Rainforest Alliance, had warned in 2021 C.E. that the 2030 C.E. target, though perhaps realistic, felt insufficient given the pace of the climate emergency. His caution was not wrong.
The financial companies — including Aviva, Schroders, and AXA — that pledged in 2021 C.E. to end investment in activities linked to deforestation have faced ongoing pressure to prove their commitments are more than disclosure exercises. Independent audits show uneven progress across the sector.
And the question of what comes next looms. Ending net deforestation was the 2030 C.E. target. Restoring the roughly 1 billion acres of degraded forest land that scientists say is needed to meaningfully address the climate and biodiversity crises will require a sustained effort that dwarfs anything attempted so far. The International Union for Conservation of Nature’s ecosystem restoration frameworks and the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration now provide the scaffolding — but scaffolding still needs builders.
What 2030 C.E. proves, if nothing else, is that a commitment backed by money, monitoring, and political accountability can move the needle even on problems that have resisted change for generations. The forests are, for the first time in modern history, coming back. That is not a small thing.
Read more
For more on this story, see: BBC News — COP26: World leaders promise to end deforestation by 2030
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- Indigenous land rights milestone at COP30 covers 160 million hectares
- The Good News for Humankind archive on climate action
About this article
- 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
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