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Environment
Apr 28, 2026
Analyzed by Llama- 4 Scout 17B 16E Instruct

Mexico's Ancient Forests Under Threat from Cartel-Driven Deforestation

AI Summary
Criminal groups, including factions of the Sinaloa cartel, have intensified illegal deforestation in Mexico's Sierra Tarahumara, seizing control of communal land through intimidation, extortion, and murder. The ecological toll has been severe, with 9,000 hectares of forest lost to illegal logging since 2001.

The Devastating Impact of Cartel-Driven Deforestation

Decades ago, the children of Rochéachi village in the Sierra Tarahumara – pine-covered mountains of north-west Mexico’s Chihuahua state – would run through the forest by night. In the rainy season, they would collect fireflies whose glimmering light would flicker through the hollows of the pine trees.

“We had peace. We used to walk and play and be together,” says one mother of three, who asked to remain anonymous, about the forest she once knew. “Now, children can’t go out to play. We don’t know what might happen.”

The Rise of Illegal Logging and Cartel Control

Since the mid-2010s, criminal groups, including factions of the Sinaloa cartel, have intensified illegal deforestation, seizing control of communal land known as ejidos through intimidation, extortion, and murder.

The ecological toll has also been severe. According to the environmental organisation Water and Forests for Life, 9,000 hectares (22,400 acres) of forest in the Sierra Tarahumara have been lost to illegal logging since 2001.

The Economic and Environmental Consequences

Sawmills linked to the cartels falsify documents to launder timber estimated by one academic to be worth up to $270m (£200m) annually, while the US government puts the figure at $342m to $978m. Deforestation has disrupted the region’s hydrological system, causing droughts, crop failures, and food insecurity.

The Human Cost and Fear

Rochéachi, about 20 miles from the town of Guachochi, is home to several groups of Indigenous people, including the Rarámuri and Ódami. Along the Sierra Tarahumara’s nearly 745-mile (1,200km) length, individuals and organisations have reported a sharp rise in illegal deforestation.

“Everyone is afraid,” says the woman from Rochéachi, a member of the Rarámuri Indigenous community. “I’m worried that illegal logging is destroying everything.”

The Need for Effective Action

Local people condemn the lack of an effective means of reporting forest-related crimes anonymously. Some claim that the groups responsible for illegal logging in the Sierra Tarahumara have informants within Mexico’s environment ministry and the office of the federal attorney for environmental protection.