Today’s Solutions: December 17, 2025

If you have been following the news about the fires in the Amazon, chances are you have heard the statistic that 20 percent of our oxygen comes from the Amazon Rainforest. Added to this observation, often in the conventional news media, is a panic-inducing statement that the lungs of the planet are collapsing. Writing in The Conversation, atmospheric scientist Scott Denning says that while the flames are absolutely an ecological disaster, this fact about the air we breathe is not accurate, and the science of atmospheric oxygen is quite a bit more nuanced. 

While one-third of oxygen produced by photosynthesis is created by tropical rainforests, nearly all the oxygen created by photosynthetic plants each year is consumed by living organisms and fires. The oxygen that makes up 21 percent of our atmosphere has accumulated over millions of years due to the slight imbalance in the ratio of oxygen algae produces compared to the amount which ocean microbes consume.  

So while the fires in the Amazon are disastrous in terms of biodiversity loss, air pollution, and the grave harm to indigenous groups and other denizens of the forest, Denning points out that “even if all organic matter on Earth were burned at once, less than one percent of the world’s oxygen ambient would be consumed.”  

While we at the Optimist Daily are as justifiably horrified as the rest of the world at the massive and largely human-caused fires in the Amazon, we wanted to quell the irrational fears about suffocation over which our kids are losing sleep. The bigger question is: can we use this ecological disaster in a unique globally relevant location to come together as a planet and take effective action against the real ecological collapse that is underway?

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation regains ancestral lands near Yosemite in major c...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Nearly 900 acres of ancestral territory have been officially returned to the Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation, marking a ...

Read More

8 fermented foods that your gut will love (and that taste great, too!) 

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Fermented foods have been a dietary staple in many cultures for centuries, but in the U.S., they’re only ...

Read More

Breaking the silence: empowering menopausal women in the workplace

Addressing menopause in the workplace is long overdue in today's fast-changing work scene, where many are extending their careers into their 60s. According to ...

Read More

Insect migration: the hidden superhighway of the Pyrenees

Insects, while frequently disregarded, are critical to the planet's ecosystems. They make up about 90 percent of all animal species and play important functions ...

Read More