Turning the tide: scalable strategies for Amazonian forest restoration
Nathália Nascimento, Diego Oliveira Brandão, Julia Arieira, Carlos Afonso NobreForest restoration is widely promoted as a central strategy to reverse ecosystem degradation and reduce the risk of an Amazon tipping point. Yet, despite increasing commitments and investments, restoration has struggled to achieve meaningful scale. We argue that this limitation is not primarily technical, but structural. Restoration efforts remain embedded within an incumbent regime characterized by land concentration, insecure tenure, speculative land markets, and commodity‐driven expansion that systematically favors forest clearing over long‐term recovery. At the same time, scaling restoration without explicit ecological and social safeguards risks reproducing patterns of inequality, ecological simplification, and territorial exclusion. Productive restoration, agroforestry systems, socio‐bioeconomy initiatives, and carbon finance can contribute to landscape recovery, but only when grounded in ecological integrity, species diversity, secure land rights, combating organized crime, and inclusive governance. Otherwise, they may incentivize simplified, low‐diversity systems and reinforce land concentration dynamics. We propose that durable scaling requires integrated land governance reform, territorialized financial mechanisms, diversified restoration value chains, and adaptive monitoring frameworks that incorporate ecological and social indicators.