Alexandre de Santi

About

Managing editor — Brazil

Alexandre de Santi's journalism career began in 1999 as a reporter for radio, web and a daily newspaper, where he honed his skills for five years. In 2011, he embarked on an entrepreneurial path by founding Fronteira, an editorial studio. This venture served as a base to write and edit in-depth and investigative pieces on science, environment, health, and crime — but also music, football, and food — for prominent Brazilian media outlets. During this period, Santi also authored and co-authored three books. In 2018, he took on a new mission as deputy editor at The Intercept Brazil, where he played a key role in significant investigative series, including the Vaza Jato, which had a profound impact on Brazilian politics. At The Intercept, he also led the site's environmental coverage and partnerships with the U.S. newsroom. These efforts led to awards and a successful reader-funded sustainability model for the outlet. Santi joined Mongabay in 2022 as the English editor for Brazil, primarily covering the Amazon, and has served as the managing editor for Brazil since 2025. He also collaborated as an editor for Impedimento, a renowned Latin American football website, and was one of the founding associates of Matinal, a Porto Alegre-based local news nonprofit.

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265 stories

Boosted with fresh donations, Amazon Fund reboots stalled projects

The counterstrike: Brazilian Congress moves to block Lula’s environmental agenda

Agro giants buy grains from farmers fined for using Indigenous land in Brazil

World Bank: Brazil faces $317 billion in annual losses to Amazon deforestation

A Twitter bot tracks meat production in the Brazilian Amazon

Second chance for Lula as controversial Amazon dam goes up for renewal

Logging permit threatens Quilombola bioeconomic ‘paradise’ in the Amazon

‘Many features of the Amazon are man-made’: Q&A with archaeologist Eduardo Neves

Mouth of the Amazon oil exploration clashes with Lula’s climate promises

‘I’ll keep fighting’: Indigenous activist and Goldman winner Alessandra Munduruku

Professional services abound for Amazon land grabbers seeking legitimacy

‘Don’t buy Brazilian gold’: Q&A with Indigenous leader Júnior Hekurari Yanomami

New zipline on Rio’s Sugarloaf raises outcry from conservationists

Report sums up Bolsonaro’s destruction legacy and Amazon’s next critical steps

‘Gold library’ helps Brazil crack down on Amazon’s illegal mining

Tropical forest regeneration offsets 26% of carbon emissions from deforestation

Brazil tackles illegal miners, but finds their mercury legacy harder to erase

Make it local: Deforestation link to less Amazon rainfall tips activism shift

Restoration turns pastures into wildlife haven in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest

Yanomami crisis sparks action against illegal gold in the Amazon

In Brazil, criminals dismantle one of the best-preserved swaths of the Amazon

Deforestation could pose disease threat to Amazon’s white-lipped peccaries

Lula wants to mirror Amazon’s lessons in all biomes, but challenges await

The $20m flip: The story of the largest land grab in the Brazilian Amazon

US pledges Amazon Fund donation, renewing hope for the rainforest

Forest modeling misses the water for the carbon: Q&A with Antonio Nobre & Anastassia Makarieva

Electricity day and night: Solar power is changing isolated Amazon communities

JBS is accused of misleading investors with suspicious green bonds

Yanomami health disaster prompts outrage as Lula vows to tackle crisis

From Japan to Brazil: Reforesting the Amazon with the Miyawaki method

Ecotourism and education: Win-win solution for Pantanal jaguars and ranchers

Q&A: Climatologist Carlos Nobre’s dream of an Amazon Institute of Technology

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