The Groundbreaking Study on Amazon Rainfall Economics
A recent research publication has quantified one of the Amazon rainforest's most vital yet underappreciated services: generating rainfall that sustains Brazil's agriculture and economy. Published in Communications Earth & Environment, a Nature Portfolio journal, the study led by scientists from the University of Leeds and the Universidade Estadual do Amazonas (UEA) estimates that the Brazilian Legal Amazon produces rainfall worth approximately US$20 billion (R$100 billion) annually.
The collaboration highlights the role of higher education institutions in tackling global challenges. Researchers Jessica C. A. Baker and Callum Smith from Leeds' School of Earth and Environment worked with José A. P. Veiga from UEA in Manaus, Brazil, alongside experts from Rabo Carbon Bank. Their work combines advanced climate modeling with satellite observations to provide policymakers with concrete figures.

Understanding Amazon 'Flying Rivers' and Evapotranspiration
The Amazon's influence on rainfall extends far beyond its borders through a phenomenon called 'flying rivers'—atmospheric moisture transported from forest evapotranspiration to southern regions. Evapotranspiration (ET) is the process where water is transferred from land to atmosphere via evaporation from soil and transpiration from plants. In the Amazon, vast canopy releases massive humidity, seeding clouds that travel thousands of kilometers.
This moisture supports rainfed agriculture in Brazil's Center-West (Mato Grosso soy fields), Southeast (São Paulo coffee), and South. Without it, droughts like those in 2021 could become routine, crippling production. The study emphasizes that tropical forests act as 'rain-making machines,' with each square meter contributing 240 liters of rain annually across tropics, rising to 300 liters in the Amazon.
Brazilian universities like UEA play a pivotal role in monitoring these dynamics, integrating local data with global models to reveal regional vulnerabilities.
Methodology: Satellite Data Meets Climate Models
To arrive at these figures, researchers synthesized data from satellite precipitation products (e.g., CHIRPS, GPM, ERA5) and CMIP6 climate models from the LUMIP project. They analyzed rainfall reductions from deforestation: –2.4 mm/year per 1% forest loss pantropically, –3.0 mm/year in Amazon.
Converting mm to liters (1 mm/m² = 1 L/m²), they estimated forest contributions. Economic value used Brazil's agricultural water price (US$0.0198/m³). For Brazilian Legal Amazon (330 million ha), total: US$19.6 billion/year. Uncertainty: ±US$7 billion from rainfall response variability.
This rigorous approach, involving UEA's expertise in Amazon hydrology, bridges observational data gaps and model simulations, setting a new standard for ecosystem service valuation.
Key Findings: From Liters to Billions
Core results: Each hectare of Amazon forest generates rainfall worth US$59.40/year. Brazilian Amazon: US$20 billion total. Protected areas (220M ha): US$13 billion; Indigenous lands (110M ha): US$6.5 billion. Past deforestation (80M ha): US$4.8 billion annual loss.
- Cotton crop needs 607 L/m²/year—equivalent to 2 m² Amazon forest.
- Soybean: 501 L/m² (1.7 m² forest).
- Corn: similar demands.
These equate forest services to cropland water needs, showing agriculture's dependence.
Photo by Daniel Granja on Unsplash
Impacts on Brazilian Agriculture and Economy
Brazil's agribusiness (6.5% GDP, US$150B) thrives on Amazon rains. Soy in Mato Grosso, corn in Paraná—85% rainfed—benefit directly. Reduced rainfall from deforestation risks US$1B+ annual losses, volatility in commodities.
Link to higher education jobs in Mato Grosso, where universities study ag-climate links. Hydro power (60% Brazil energy) and rivers (navigation) also depend on it.
Read the full studyBrazilian Universities' Role: Spotlight on UEA
UEA's José A. P. Veiga brought Amazon-specific insights, validating models with local data. Universities like UEA, INPE (São José dos Campos), and USP drive such research, training experts in climate science. This study exemplifies international collaboration boosting Brazil's research profile.
Explore higher ed jobs in environmental science at Brazilian institutions.
Deforestation Risks: Billions at Stake
Recent low deforestation (5,796 km², lowest in 11 years) is positive, but cumulative 80M ha loss equals US$4.8B/year forgone rain. Full Amazon tipping point: US$120B/year risks. Protected/indigenous areas preserve value, but pressure mounts (e.g., Pará APAs).
Policy Implications: Payments for Ecosystem Services
Valuation supports PES (Pagamento por Serviços Ecossistêmicos), like Amazon Fund or Tropical Forest Forever Facility ($125B goal). Blended finance (e.g., $225M reforestation bond) viable. Eases conservation-ag tensions: forests as 'macroeconomic infrastructure'.
"A floresta em pé é importante para esse setor econômico," says Veiga.
Photo by Hudson Barbosa on Unsplash
Future Outlook and University-Led Solutions
Ongoing UEA-Leeds work could refine valuations, model tipping points. Brazilian unis lead reforestation research, AI for monitoring. Positive: Youth in higher ed career advice drive sustainability.

Conclusion: Investing in Forest Research
This UEA-Leeds study proves Amazon's R$100B rain value, urging protection. Universities are key. Check Rate My Professor for climate experts, higher ed jobs in env science, university jobs Brazil, career advice, or post on post a job.