THE AMAZON, UNDONE: DEVOURING THE RAINFOREST
THE AMAZON, UNDONE
DEVOURING THE RAINFOREST
By Terrence McCoy and Júlia Ledur
April 29, 2022
The pattern is clear: First, the forest is razed.
Then the cattle are moved in.
If the Amazon is to die, it will be beef that kills it.
And America will be an accomplice.
Cattle ranching, responsible for the great majority of deforestation in the Amazon, is pushing the forest to the edge of what scientists warn could be a vast and irreversible dieback that claims much of the biome. Despite agreement that change is necessary to avert disaster, despite attempts at reform, despite the resources of Brazils federal government and powerful beef companies, the destruction continues.
[How deforestation is pushing the Amazon toward a tipping point]
But the ongoing failure to protect the worlds largest rainforest from rapacious cattle ranching is no longer Brazils alone, a Washington Post investigation shows. It is now shared by the United States and the American consumer.
In the two years since Washington lifted a moratorium that was imposed on raw Brazilian beef over food safety concerns, the United States has grown to become its second-biggest buyer. The country bought more than 320 million pounds of Brazilian beef last year and is on pace to purchase nearly twice as much this year. The biggest supplier is the beef behemoth JBS, whose fleet of brands stock some of Americas major retail chains and businesses: Kroger, Goya Foods, Albertsons (the parent company of Safeway, Jewel-Osco and Vons).
JBS, the worlds largest beef producer, has repeatedly been accused by environmentalists of buying cattle raised on illegally deforested land. Greenpeace first alleged such ties in a 2009 report. In 2017, Brazils environmental law enforcement agency, Ibama, fined the company what was then more than $7.5 million, alleging that two of its Amazon meatpacking plants had purchased nearly 50,000 such animals. In October, federal prosecutors focusing on deforestation alleged widespread irregularities in the companys direct supply chain from January 2018 to June 2019 in Pará state.
More:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/interactive/2022/amazon-beef-deforestation-brazil/