Brazil's Beef Industry Has A New Plan To Protect Against Deforestation. Oh, Yay, We're Saved.
For many, the overriding image of agriculture in the Amazon is one of environmental destruction. About 80% of deforestation in the region has been attributed to cattle ranching, tainting beef exports. Brazils beef industry hopes to tempt buyers back to the Amazon region, which covers about 40% of the countrys total area, with a new deforestation-free pledge. But critics are concerned it could effectively legalise deforestation in the region.
In May, government officials began fleshing out the details of the so-called Amacro sustainable development zone, which it is hoped will lead to a massive intensification of agriculture in the Amazon. The Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, is expected to greenlight the project later this year. The Amacro zone an acronym taken from the states it covers: Amazonas, Acre and Rondônia is a vast 465,800 sq km (180,000 sq mile) region in north-west Brazil. It encompasses the Mapinguari national park, Brazils fifth largest protected area, and the Kaxarari indigenous territory, where the tribe has struggled to defend its land against loggers. Greenpeace has identified the northern portion of the zone as an emerging deforestation hotspot.
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Amacro is the brainchild of Assuero Doca Veronez, a powerful figure in Amazonian agribusiness, who told a Brazilian news site last year that deforestation for us is synonymous with progress. Veronez, a ranch owner and president of Acres Federation of Agriculture and Livestock, was fined for illegal deforestation in 2006. He denied any wrongdoing and said he sold the property in 2002. Veronez says more intensive cattle ranching will enable more beef to be produced on less land and protect against deforestation. He claims to produce about 2.5 times the state average for beef. Amacro can contribute to the preservation of these areas, he says.
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Judson Valentim, a researcher at Brazils agriculture research agency, says intensification is unlikely to change the system responsible for the breakneck pace of deforestation. Veronez, like most large ranchers, relies on a network of smaller producers, most of whom, according to Valentim, lack the technical and financial resources to invest in more efficient grazing practices. While ranchers like Veronez may avoid deforestation, their suppliers may not have the luxury to do so, says Valentim. Growing demand for Amazonian beef has tempted more local people to raise cattle as a viable livelihood for feeding their families, leading to a sharp increase in illegal deforestation.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/nov/17/brazils-amazon-beef-plan-will-legalise-deforestation-say-critics