As soon as the rainy season is over, the Amazon rainforest, called the lungs of the earth, is again in flames.

Brazil's National Space Research Institute says more than 2,200 fires occurred in the Amazon rain forest last month, an increase of 20% over the same period last year.

During the month of June, there were an average of 75 wildfires per day.

Given the significant increase in logging this year, the fire is expected to increase further.

This is mainly because the trees are cut down and then burned to make cropland or pasture.

[Batista/Amazon Greenpeace spokesman for the lake: The logging warning area reached 650,000 hectares from January to May this year. It has risen 78% from last year.] The

Amazon Environmental Research Institute, a non-governmental organization in Brazil, predicted that by the end of July, there would be 9,000 km of Amazon rainforest, logging and unburned by the end of July.

The Amazon rain forest, which burned from January to April of this year, when President Bowsonaru came to power, reached 5,500 km.

Environmental activists insist that the destruction of the forests is on the rise, with President Righteous President Bousonaru's crackdown on environmental destruction.

President Bousonaru has urged to increase agriculture and mining in the Amazon while claiming to preserve the rainforest.

Fires in the Amazon Rainforest are expected to be the most severe from August to November.

In August last year, an average of 1,000 fires per day occurred.

[Carlos Soja/Amazon Environmental Solidarity Member: Destruction of forests carries serious health problems. Overlapping felling and corona19 can cause catastrophes to indigenous peoples.]

Smoke from rainforests is covering the Amazon, threatening the health of locals.