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they call it “grão dourado,” or the “golden grain” corn
In the past decade new opportunities for corn have emerged in the country to make sure that corn can be valorised even more: by turning corn into ethanol for fuel consumption and selling its by-products as animal nutrition
Pig Progress travelled to Mato Grosso state to learn more
one of the most dynamic business sectors in Brazil’s agro-industry is that of corn biorefinery
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The American agribusiness magnate Bruce Rastetter
who is already the biggest producer of corn-based ethanol in Brazil
has plans to triple processing at his plants by relying on the generosity of governments and banks with green credits and incentives destined to combat climate change
Rastetter’s businesses received more than 2.2 billion reais ($459 billion) in offsets and credits from compliance with environmental targets through FS Agrisolutions
All this money went to Rastetter’s ethanol plants in Mato Grosso
as well as resources from the National Economic and Social Development Bank (BNDES)
the company plans to further leverage its businesses by selling itself as a negative carbon producer
Its promise is to implement a system for capturing carbon from plants and storing the gas below ground
the IPCC warned that the capture of carbon is facing various restrictions in terms of viability
as well as demonstrating adverse impacts on human rights and ecosystems
What Rastetter is trying to implement in Brazil is practically a copy of the Midwest Carbon project that he is spearheading in the United States with a promise to capture 12 million tons of carbon in ethanol plants
The gas will be captured in five states and transported through pipelines over more than 3,000 kilometers (1,860 miles) to North Dakota
where it will be injected into geological structures
FS obtained a license to drill in order to “evaluate the potential for injectivity,” according to the company
all of which are endangered biomes and locations where Rastetter has plants
the cultivation of sugar cane has been banned to prevent the production of ethanol from encouraging deforestation and encroachment on protected areas
The production of the grain quadrupled in a little more than one decade
to the more than 46 million tons expected for the 2022-23 season
Part of this production fuels 11 plants in the state
accounting for 80% of corn-based ethanol in Brazil
“Corn appears as a substitute for biofuels because sugar cane is prohibited in the Amazon and the Pantanal
and palm in rainforest areas aren’t clean as promised
they cause deforestation and don’t fix carbon
They can’t be sold as environmental solutions,” states Lucas Ferrante
a PhD in ecology from the National Institute for Amazon Research (INPA)
the national market for corn-based ethanol has grown 800%
FS became a leader in the segment and is the fourth largest producer of biofuel in the country
competing with giants in the sugar-alcohol sector such as Raízen and BP Bunge
With a third plant recently inaugurated in Primavera do Leste, also in Mato Grosso state, and with new units forecast in coming years
FS doesn’t intend to slow its demand for more and more corn plantations and planted forests — which are used for fueling the boilers
which in addition to ethanol produce energy and material for animal feed
The company projects that it will triple its current production of 1.4 billion liters (370 million gallons) of ethanol per year and hit 5 billion liters (1.32 billion gallons) in 2026
the Energy Research Company (EPE) is forecasting that it will reach 9.1 billion (2.4 billion gallons) in 2032
One of the arguments FS uses to justify its green certificates is that a good part of the processed corn in its plants is interim harvest
which shares the same plots as the soybeans from the first harvest
having less influence in farming than a change in the use of soil
temporary plantations — which include the cultivation of soybeans and corn — occupy an area of 12 million hectares (29.6 million acres) in Mato Grosso
which is greater than the entire state of Amapá
were opened up in deforested areas over the last 20 years
Even though FS alleges that it is rigorously controlling the environmental practices of its corn and eucalyptus suppliers
O Joio e O Trigo discovered that the executives of the company in Brazil are themselves connected to illegal deforestation in Mato Grosso and Amapá
deforestation in areas surrounding the plants FS has in Mato Grosso
within a range of 150 kilometers (93 miles)
has destroyed 486,000 ha (1.2 million acres) of rainforests over the last five years
according to data from the National Institute for Space Research (INPE)
which are the areas where the company says it has a demand for production inputs
are Indigenous Lands and Conservation Units
The same arguments that justified the prohibition of cultivation of cane for the production of biofuels in the Brazilian Amazon
“Principally because these plantations threaten biodiversity and their effects extend beyond the areas that are cultivated
even to the rainforests,” states the researcher
In articles published in the scientific journals Science and Nature
Ferrante points out that the expansion of biofuels into areas of native forests aggravates climate change and results in new cycles of deforestation
increasing the emission of carbon in these chains
both in rainforests as well as in plantations
It is a kind of farming that raises a lot of problems
Energy transition must be thought of in a way that it doesn’t overtax the production of biofuels in areas like the Pantanal and the Amazon,” adds the researcher
fossil fuel is used more than any other source to produce corn
One of the main problems with the generation of biofuels is that the main plans include expansion into areas in the Amazon
involving more deforestation of the western part of the rainforest
which is crucial to the rain cycle for the entire continent,” explains professor Philip Fearnside
as a research member of the UN Climate Panel
Fearnside was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for the warnings his group issued on risks from global warming
“Brazil’s priority is to reduce emissions and to stop deforestation immediately
Brazil has great potential for developing renewable forms of energy
This potential needs to be used to substitute for projects that don’t contribute to the reduction of emissions,” Fearnside reasons
In March of this year, FS was authorized under the new format of the RenovaBio program
which supplies credit at discounted interest rates for clients who document improvements in environmental indicators
which are RenovaBio certificates of carbon emissions avoided
with each of these being the equivalent of 1 ton of CO2 avoided
The group also receives resources from the largest manager of agro-investment funds in the country. XP Investments acquired 216.43 million reais ($45 million) of the company’s Agribusiness Receivables Certificates (CRA)
offered by the bank as a fixed-income security
This injection of funds into FS Bioenergia is the largest asset in the XPAG11 portfolio
the corporation highlights that the plant has “one of the lowest production costs in the country.”
FS Bioenergia is the fruit of the union between Rastetter and influential Brazilian agribusiness entrepreneurs
among whom are some of the largest landholders in the Amazon
The partnership relationship between the Summit group
which controls corn-based ethanol plants in the U.S.
is complex and involves more than a dozen legal entities in Brazil and abroad
Rastetter doesn’t hide his sympathy for politicians
he bestowed part of his fortune on the Republican party and Donald Trump
he acted as an agribusiness adviser to the ex-president of the U.S
and attempted to exert his influence on local politics in Iowa
Rastetter inaugurated the first 100% corn-based ethanol plant in the country
at a ceremony that included the presence of then-President Michel Temer; Blairo Maggi
the minister of agriculture at the time; and the governors of Mato Grosso
In March 2022, accompanied by the current mayor of Lucas do Rio Verde, who is also a partner in his businesses, the American was honored with the inauguration of a new children’s wing of the São Lucas Philanthropic Hospital, which is now known as Centro Materno-Infantil Bruce Rastetter
Rastetter donated 5 million reais (about $1 million) for the construction of the new wing
saying that it was part of American culture to contribute to the community where one prospers
the ex-mayor and the president of the foundation that administers the hospital and honored Rastetter
Days earlier, Rastetter had already received the state’s greatest honor from the vice-governor
who was the mayor of Lucas do Rio Verde three times
“He freed the corn producers in Mato Grosso,” the governor declared
who is lobbying for more space for biofuels in the country’s economy; and the current leader of the Agricultural Parliamentary Front
Marino Franz has donated to the Mato Grosso State Board of União Brasil and the Progressistas parties
donated 35,000 reais ($ 7,000) to the reelection campaign of Bolsonaro and another 25,000 reais ($5,000) to the Republicanos party
Franz began his businesses as a distributor of fertilizers and pesticides and expanded his activities into the corn-based ethanol and soybean markets
Franz also directs transportation companies and holdings linked to agribusiness
Two of Geller’s brothers were arrested in the same Federal Police operation
According to the charges lodged by the Federal Prosecutor’s Office
illegal deforestation was identified in Tartarugalzinho and the capital of Amapá
in line with the company’s interests in the implementation of plantations of soybeans and corn
The fines amounted to almost 20 million reais ($4 million)
In 2015, Rastetter was in Amapá
and hailed the state’s geographic location for business due to the ease of transporting products to the United States
The rush to build pipelines for projects involving the capture of carbon has been accompanied by a premium that is associated with the millions that these companies can raise
The Summit Agricultural Group’s project for capturing and storing carbon in the United States is budgeted at $4.5 billion and has received large investments and public subsidies
the initiative has united Indigenous groups
landowners and farmers throughout the region who are fiercely opposed to the project
In December 2022, there were 30 active carbon capture projects in the world, according to the Global CCS Institute
Another 10 projects are under construction and more than 150 are being developed in more than 20 countries
Of these, only eight projects used renewable sources in the production of ethanol and energy. One of these is the pilot project for burning wood in the United Kingdom, led by the Drax company, which depends on substantial investments from the government
In the United States, the federal government offers large subsidies for carbon capture projects like Rustetter’s: $85 per ton of CO2 permanently stored and $60 per ton used for advanced recovery of petroleum
provided the reductions can be demonstrated
Summit may bring in $600 million annually in federal fiscal credits if their projections for the storage of carbon are confirmed
The $7.2 billion in fiscal credits that the project may earn in 12 years more than covers the $4.5 billion price of the pipeline
the government forecasts an additional bonus of 20% in credits generated by RenovaBio for whomever can prove negative emissions
But the businessmen hope to attract greater amounts with the regulation of the sector
Part of the lack of faith in the Midwest Carbon project is motivated by the past history of Rastetter and his businesses with sustainability
is accused of expelling family farmers from the market in Iowa — a market that he came to lead
introducing confinement of swine on a large scale
his soybean and corn plantations and his cattle businesses operate based on fossil fuels for industrial agriculture
What is more, when he occupied a position on the Board of Regents in Iowa (2011-17), Rastetter involved university professors in the largest land deals in Tanzania – three “refugee camps,” according to information released by the Oakland Institute
that would dislocate more than 100,000 refugees from Burundi
Local leaders in Iowa contend that Rastetter’s promises of “slippery concepts about zero carbon
adding money as an incentive for reducing emissions,” will actually just bring him more profits
and they accuse the businessman of practicing greenwashing
Rastetter is trying to reach an agreement with landowners to construct a pipeline network crossing their lands
he is requesting government authorization to cross lands where the owners don’t want to sign permission waivers
the storage and stockpiling of CO² splits opinions
The first divergence is related to the efficiency of these projects
must involve large operations and a range of polluting elements
“It’s true that with the gravity of the problem of global warming we are going to have to use all options that are available
and stockpiling carbon has some arguments in its favor
there are very high costs involved with this operation and it can consume resources that could be used to finance other alternatives,” says Fearnside
the oil industry is already using the technique of capturing carbon injected into wells for the extraction of more hydrocarbons
this sector is also interested in the use of CCS as an environmental measure
and it is one of the principal financers of carbon capture and storage projects worldwide
“These initiatives may also end up justifying the use of fossil fuels
all of the emissions may be captured and stored
what we need to do is to reduce emissions from these sources,” adds Fearnside
In an article published in Nature Communications
a researcher and climate science professor from the University of Exeter
analyzed the storage of carbon with raw material originating from areas planted over forests — which is what the people involved with ethanol plants intend to do — and concluded that it will not be capable of attaining the same climatic efficiency
the return of carbon losses in the substitution of rainforests with planted biomasses may take more than 100 years
Another study, commissioned by the Natural Resources Defense Council
used an “emissions simulator” to demonstrate that the use of biomass for the generation of energy
FS is trying to license its project for carbon capture and storage
and already has a license for drilling a test well at its plant in Lucas do Rio Verde
The license has been granted by the environment secretary of Mato Grosso
In 2022, a proposed law for regulating the sector was presented by Senator Jean Paul Prates
in a joining of interests that involve the ethanol and petroleum markets
The project was formed in the ProBioCCS subcommittee
which relied on a consultant hired by the ethanol sector
No environmentalists or climate specialists were involved in the project
there is only a licensing request for carbon capture in one plant
it is quite possible that Rastetter’s plan for a negative carbon project in Brazil will follow in the footsteps of Midwest Carbon and include the rest of the plants in the region
which may mean the construction of pipelines that crisscross vast areas of the central-west
Currently, the 18 corn-based ethanol plants in Brazil are all concentrated in the same region
In an interview with Valor Econômico newspaper
gave some signs regarding the company’s intentions
saying that the implementation of carbon capture throughout the entire Brazilian ethanol sector
would be able to remove 34 million tons of carbon by 2030
Rastetter has pocketed a lot of money embracing the so-called “green change,” while his plants continue generating greenhouse gases and demanding increasing production of biomasses for their boilers from corn and wood
FS responded that it does not comment on environmental fines incurred by its partners because they pertain to other companies
The company also added that “it has a policy of socio-environmental responsibility that is published in its website that addresses all of the company’s guidelines for the purchase of grains,” pointing out that the company does not acquire grains from areas of deforestation or that are located in Units of Conservation or Indigenous Lands
the company did not reveal who its suppliers are or where these planted areas are located
As its topsoil washes away, the Corn Belt is losing yields — and carbon
Banner image of a corn-based ethanol plant in Lucas do Rio Verde
This story was first published in Portuguese on O Joio e o Trigo
The “fortress conservation” model is under pressure in East Africa
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Mongabay’s Special Issue goes beyond the region’s world-renowned safaris to examine how rural communities and governments are reckoning with conservation’s colonial origins
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deforestation and emissions data for Brazilian soy
The contributing SEI researchers are Trase Director Toby Gardner
While the rate of deforestation and land conversion driven by the expansion of soy production in Brazil has slowed
the Amazon and Cerrado continue to be cleared despite zero-deforestation commitments made by soy traders
Land clearance in the Pampas grasslands is accelerating to meet growing demand for soy
Mass soybean harvesting in Campo Verde, Mato Grosso, Brazil. Photo: alffoto / Getty Images Plus.
Trase data shows the amount of soy deforestation and land conversion decreased from 743,000 hectares (ha) in 2018 to 686,000 ha in 2019 and 562,000 ha in 2020
while the total area of soy planted increased from 34.8 Mha in 2018 to 35.9 Mha in 2019 and 37.2 Mha in 2020
This percentage increases if we look further back
The decline in soy-driven deforestation could be put at risk by future demand for soy
the price of soy has increased due to demand for soy-based animal feed from China
increasing global food prices and Russia’s war in Ukraine
Soy prices in 2022 have stabilized but remain high
potentially incentivizing further deforestation and conversion to expand soy plantations
While soy plantations have expanded most in the Cerrado and were associated with 355,000 ha of recent deforestation in 2019 and 264,000 ha in 2020 – an area almost twice the size of the city of São Paulo – Trase data reveals that the Pampas is also a particularly active frontier for the conversion of natural vegetation for soy
228,000 ha of soy was harvested in areas recently deforested and converted in the Pampas
soy production in the Amazon in 2019 was linked to 77,600 ha of recent deforestation and in 2020 soy production in 2020 was linked to 76,400 ha of recent deforestation
The municipalities of São Gabriel and Dom Pedrito in southern Brazil’s Rio Grande do Sul had 17,600 and 12,800 ha respectively of soy deforestation in areas of native Pampas
placing them in the top-five municipalities with the highest soy deforestation in 2020 alongside Feliz Natal in Mato Grosso
The Pampas biome is an area rich in native grasslands which makes it suitable for cattle grazing
each tonne of soy produced in the Pampas was linked to the clearance of over 10 times as much natural vegetation as a tonne from the Cerrado
The EU is finalizing a draft regulation requiring mandatory due diligence on imports of certain agricultural commodities
to prohibit products grown on land deforested after a cut-off date (likely to be the end of 2019 or later)
The regulation would establish a risk assessment system to identify and categorize the ‘high’
‘low’ or ‘standard’ risk regions within producer countries
just 309 of a total of 2,388 soy-producing municipalities accounted for 95% of Brazil’s soy deforestation (between 2015 and 2019)
These municipalities represented 51% of Brazil’s soy production in 2020 (62 million tonnes) and 49% of exports (41 million tonnes)
This means that 2,079 soy-producing municipalities in Brazil, representing 49% of production (59.6 million tonnes) and 51% of exports (42.7 million tonnes), have negligible levels of deforestation and conversion risk. If implemented effectively
the EU’s risk-based approach to due diligence could focus regulatory efforts where they are most needed
while lowering the cost of compliance for exports from low-risk areas
Cargill and Archer Daniels Midland – continue to be the most exposed to deforestation and conversion from exports of Brazilian soy
although they all show a decreasing trend in 2018-2020
This might be attributed to companies’ efforts to clean their supply chains or to the stabilization of some agricultural regions
where less soy-suitable lands with remaining native vegetation are available
Following rapid expansion into trading Brazilian soy since 2017
Singapore-based Olam Group is now among the top five traders linked to soy deforestation and conversion
Soy deforestation and conversion exposure (annual hectares and per thousand tonnes of soy) by trader in Brazil
China continues to be by far the largest importer of soy deforestation and conversion from Brazil
continuing an upward trend which began in 2013
China’s imports were linked to 229,000 ha of soy deforestation
followed by Brazil’s own domestic consumption at 102,000 ha
China’s per-tonne deforestation exposure in 2020 is the second highest after Portugal and closely followed by Brazil’s own domestic consumption
The EU’s soy deforestation exposure decreased from 56,100 ha in 2018 to 29,800 in 2020
much lower than 2015 when it peaked at 201,000 ha
This figure reflects an overall declining trend
but also a shift in sourcing patterns in favour of regions with less recent deforestation and conversion
Portugal stands out as the EU country of first import with the highest intensity of exposure to deforestation per tonne of imported soy
and that together account for about 95% of soy produced in the Amazon
These companies have made similar individual zero-deforestation commitments that cover other areas such as the Cerrado
ZDCs covered about 50% of Brazil’s soy exports in 2020
The fact that half of Brazil’s soy exports are not covered by ZDCs and that deforestation is still rampant in the Amazon and Cerrado more than a decade after they were signed highlights the limitations of the voluntary approach
and that policymakers may need to consider regulatory measures and ways to strengthen enforcement
This experience also casts doubt on the prospects of traders achieving their Agriculture Sector Roadmap to 1.5°C
which was announced at the COP27 climate conference in November 2022
to limit carbon emissions from land-use change
grasslands and other natural ecosystems and replacing them with soy fields releases greenhouse gases (measured as the equivalent of carbon dioxide) that drive climate change
Brazilian soy deforestation and conversion linked to the 2020 harvest resulted in the release of 28 million tonnes of carbon from native vegetation, equivalent to 103 million tonnes of CO₂ – 11% of the country’s total land use change annual emissions
Soy replaced three times as much native vegetation in the Cerrado as the Amazon – but emissions from land clearance were at the same levels for both biomes
In 2020 there was 133,000 ha of soy in the Amazon planted on land deforested after the 2008 Soy Moratorium cut-off date
This deforestation was linked to 69 million tonnes of CO₂ emissions
This explainer is written by Tiago Reis and Yan Prada Moro. To reference this article, please use the following citation: Reis, T., & Prada Moro, Y. (2022). Connecting exports of Brazilian soy to deforestation. Trase. https://doi.org/10.48650/S8VZ-1033
Trase is a partnership between Stockholm Environment Institute and Global Canopy
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Metrics details
sand flies and cases of visceral (VL) and cutaneous (CL) leishmaniases have been reported in almost all municipalities
The aim of this study was to analyze the geographic distribution of VL and CL in relation the sand fly species found in the municipalities of Mato Grosso do Sul
We analyzed VL and CL cases from 2001 to 2018 using data from the Notifiable Diseases Information System (SINAN)
Data collected since 2003 on the presence of sand fly vectors (proven or suspected) were provided by the State Health Secretariat
A total of 3566 and 3030 cases of VL and CL
The municipalities with the most reported cases of VL were Campo Grande (2495)
Corumbá (140) and Aquidauana (136); and those for CL were Campo Grande (635) and Bodoquena (197)
The following sand fly species with vector potential were found in 59 municipalities (74.7%): Lutzomyia longipalpis
Bichromomyia flaviscutellata and Pintomyia fischeri
Sand flies were present in six municipalities where no cases of VL were reported and in two municipalities where no cases of CL were reported
Our results indicate that the geographical distribution of VL and CL in Mato Grosso do Sul expanded during the study period
and highlight the presence of sand fly vectors in municipalities where these diseases are currently considered to be non-endemic
These data emphasize the need for studies on the epidemiology of both VL and CL in this Brazilian state
which may provide information on the expansion of these diseases in Brazil
the objective of this study was to describe the geographical distribution of VL and CL cases in the State of Mato Grosso do Sul from 2001 and 2018
The presence of sand fly vectors in endemic and non-endemic municipalities was also evaluated
A descriptive study was carried out using secondary data collected on all recorded VL and CL cases in all municipalities of Mato Grosso do Sul between 2001 and 2018
The municipality in which the VL and CL cases were notified (notification municipality) and the infection site were analyzed
using information registered in the Notifiable Diseases Information System (SINAN) and made available in Datasus
The notification municipality is the city where the patient was diagnosed with leishmaniasis and subsequently treated
The infection site is the municipality where the patient resides and where the infection probably occurred
Number of visceral and cutaneous leishmaniasis cases
reported in the State of Mato Grosso do Sul
Data from the Notifiable Diseases Information System (SINAN)
Of the 79 municipalities of Mato Grosso do Sul, 59 (74.7%) reported the presence of at least one of the following proven/suspected sand fly vectors: Bichromomyia flaviscutellata, Lutzomyia longipalpis, Lutzomyia cruzi, Migonemyia migonei, Nyssomyia neivai, Nyssomyia whitmani, Pintomyia fischeri and Pintomyia pessoai (Fig. 2).
Municipalities with reported cases of VL and CL and where sand flies were reported to be present
Data on cases are from the SINAN and sand fly data (collected since 2003) are from the State Health Secretariat
Data summarized in this study demonstrate a further expansion of VL
which now occurs in 62.0% (49/79) of the municipalities of Mato Grosso do Sul
with cases reported in 94.9% (75/79) of the municipalities; two other municipalities have also been identified as infection sites for reported CL cases
the municipality responsible for the notification differed from the original infection site
Only four municipalities were identified as not reporting CL cases: Anaurilândia
This absence of reported CL cases may be due to the absence of the disease in these municipalities or to underreporting
All four of these municipalities are bordered by municipalities with reported cases
which certainly suggests that there is a risk for CL introduction
Anaurilândia and Jaraguari were identified as the probable original infection sites
which highlights the need for improving both data capture form compilation and data entry in SINAN
Further entomological studies are needed in municipalities with reported cases but where with no sand fly vectors have been reported so far
with a higher number of traps and the installation of traps in different locations
may revel the presence of sand fly vectors in these municipalities
healthcare professionals working in municipalities with a confirmed presence of sand fly vectors but with no leishmaniasis cases should be advised to actively search out possible new cases
This is pivotal to identifiy possible failures in the notification system and also to provide early diagnosis and treatment for affected patients
Our study indicates that the geographical distribution of VL and CL in Mato Grosso do Sul State during the study period has expanded
and highlights the presence of sand fly vectors in municipalities where these diseases are currently considered to be non-endemic
Recent advances and new strategies in Leishmaniasis diagnosis
Cutaneous and mucocutaneous leishmaniasis: clinical perspectives
Role of asymptomatic and symptomatic humans as reservoirs of visceral leishmaniasis in a Mediterranean context
Pan American Health Organization (PAHO). Leishmanioses. 2017. http://www.paho.org/hq/index.php?option=com_topics&view=article&id=29&Itemid=40754
Perspectives of vector borne diseases control in Brazil
Notifiable Diseases Information System (SINAN). Leishmaniose visceral. 2021. http://www.portalsinan.saude.gov.br/leishmaniose-visceral
Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE). Cidades e Estados. 2020. https://www.ibge.gov.br/cidades-e-estados/ms/dourados.html
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (EMBRAPA). Espécies Arbóreas Brasileiras: Clima. 2016. http://www.cnpf.embrapa.br/pesquisa/efb/clima.htm
morphology and terminology of adults and identification of American Taxa
Berlin: Springer International Publishing; 2018
A proposal of generic and subgeneric abbreviations for phlebotomine sandflies (Diptera: Psychodidae: Phlebotominae) of the world
Spatial analysis of American visceral leishmaniasis in Mato Grosso do Sul State
Predicting the geographic distribution of Lutzomyia longipapis (Diptera: Psychodidae) and visceral leishmaniasis in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul
Coinfection and delayed diagnosis of visceral leishmaniasis: died predecessors factors
Análise dos registros de leishmaniose visceral pelo método de captura-recaptura
Phlebotominae (Diptera: Psychodidae) and biomes in the State of Mato Grosso do Sul
Detection of Leishmania DNA in phlebotomines captured in Campo Grande
Espécies de flebotomíneos (Diptera: Psychodidae) coletadas em ambiente urbano em municípios com transmissão de leishmaniose visceral do Estado de Mato Grosso do Sul
Geographic distribution of phlebotomine sandfly species (Diptera: Psychodidae) in Central-West Brazil
Epidemiology of visceral leishmaniasis in Algeria: an update
Influences of climate change on the potential distribution of Lutzomyia longipalpis sensu lato (Psychodidae: Phlebotominae)
Lutzomyia migonei is a permissive vector competent for Leishmania infantum
Sandfly fauna and behavior (Diptera: Psychodidae) in municipalities of the Mesoregion North Pioneer of Paraná
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The authors would like to thank the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) for the scholarship
the Fundação de Apoio ao Desenvolvimento de Ensino
Ciência e Tecnologia do Mato Grosso do Sul (FUNDECT) for the financial support (Process 59/300.063/2015)
the Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados (UFGD) for reviewing the English (PAP-PROPP no
02/2021) and the health agents Lourival Soares Barbosa
Sérgio Novaes and José de Oliveira da Silva for their assistance in sand fly collection
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ciências da Saúde
Edith Palacio & Alexandre da Silva Cardoso
Faculdade de Ciências Biológicas e Ambientais
Laboratório de Imunopatologia e Biologia Molecular
wrote the original draft of the manuscript and designed the visualization
and MSCLJ: reviewed and edited the final manuscript
All authors read and approved the fnal manuscript
The authors declare that there are no competing interests in the development of the research
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations
unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-022-05353-0
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Volume 6 - 2019 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00081
This article is part of the Research TopicCoralline Algae: Globally Distributed Ecosystem EngineersView all 11 articles
One of the most important contributions of crustose coralline algae (CCA) to some coral reefs is their structural role in sunlit habitats
but in the Atlantic southernmost coral reef
these algae are also important components of living communities covering larger areas than corals
Little is known about their competence in occupying reef space and consequently their ecological role
This work compared two CCA species along reef sites and habitats and their responses to different irradiance levels
epoxy disks were placed at four sites and three habitats (reef base
Crustose coralline individual pieces were glued onto epoxy disks and their relative growth was estimated
Productivity responses to irradiance levels found on reef habitats was measured on incubated samples
CCA were less abundant than filamentous algae and non-calcareous crusts
Crustose algae showed no seasonal or spatial pattern in cover
contrasting with erect algae that differed in biomass among sites depending on season
Differences among habitats were only found for CCA
The dominant coralline Porolithon onkodes was more productive and grew faster than Lithophyllum stictaeforme at high irradiance level and both species were inhibited at low light
onkodes in shallow and sunlit reefs was explained by its preference for high-light environments
This study aims to describe the early colonization and growth of CCA on the reef flat
edge and base of sheltered and exposed sites in summer and winter
testing the responses of the two most common coralline species to different light levels
Preliminary observations of seaweeds on the reef community of Abrolhos Archipelago generated three hypotheses that were tested in field and laboratory experiments:
H1: CCA are more abundant than other form-functional seaweeds groups in early stages of colonization in any of the studied reef habitats
H2: Encrusting CCA have faster marginal growth than branched CCA in any of the studied reef habitats
H3: Encrusting CCA are more productive than branched CCA in environments under high irradiance
Study sites in the Abrolhos Marine National Park: Porto Norte (PN)
Sorted samples were oven dried at 60°C for 72 h until their mass was constant (not changing with time)
Colonizing seaweeds can be limited by herbivores such as parrotfishes (Labridae: Scarini), that are able to excavate calcified thalli with their fused teeth (Steneck, 1986)
CCA were collected with a hammer and chisel and shaped by cutting pliers to obtain 20 mm diameter and 3 ml volume disks
A single disk naturally free of epiphytes was fixed onto an epoxy disk of 30 mm diameter (for each crustose coralline species
Disks of both CCA species were interspersed
fixed to the reef with epoxy and left for the same period as colonization disks
The initial and final sizes of CCA were estimated by averaging two perpendicular diameters measured with calipers
The formula used to calculate the marginal relative growth rate (RGR) was:
To estimate the competence of the two most abundant CCA species under different irradiance levels
oxygen produced by CCA through net photosynthesis was measured at different levels of light intensities naturally found at each habitat
The irradiance at each site was measured with a Li-Cor light meter (LI-1000) linked to a terrestrial and submersible sensor to estimate the percentage of incident irradiance reduced by the water column
the irradiance was measured at midday hours in the summer on sunny days
The light levels of habitats were reproduced in the laboratory by 4
and in the field by shading with 1 or 3 layers of black plastic grids
being close to saturated photosynthesis (623 and 408 μmol m−2 s−1)
photo-inhibition (1093 and 716 μmol m−2 s−1)
or to levels below those that might limit photosynthesis (218 and 143 μmol m−2 s−1)
irradiance levels corresponded to those found at the reef base and within cryptic habitats (218
Variance homogeneity was tested using Cochrans test before performing analysis of variance (ANOVA) and, when necessary, data were transformed (Underwood, 1997)
Uni or bi-factorial orthogonal ANOVAs were used to test differences between treatments in experiments
Multiple comparison of means was performed using Tukey’s test
The most common erect seaweeds found on colonization disks were filamentous algae (Cladophora dalmatica
The abundance of coralline crusts was different among sites independent of seasons (Figures 2A,B). These groups of algae were abundant at all sites, except Caldeiros. Foliose algae showed similar distribution pattern. A significant interaction between seasons and sites was found for filamentous algae and non-calcareous crusts (Figures 2A,B
ANOVA F = 2.99; p ≤ 0.05 and F = 2.99; p ≤ 0.05
The filamentous algae were abundant in almost all sites during both seasons
except in Caldeiros (ANOVA p ≤ 0.0001 and p ≤ 0.01)
non-calcareous crusts were more abundant in Caldeiros in both seasons (ANOVA p ≤ 0.0001 and p ≤ 0.0001)
Seaweeds cover at study sites on reef edge
Different letters above bars indicate significant differences among means detected by Tukey’s test (p < 0.05)
Analysis of variance for algae colonization in relation to total cover and total biomass in study sites in summer and winter (n = 8)
A significant interaction was observed for biomass of colonizing algae between sites and seasons (Figures 3A,B and Table 1)
Total biomass was different among sites in summer and in winter (ANOVA F = 5.68; p ≤ 0.05 and F = 7.11; p ≤ 0.001
There was less biomass on Caldeiros than on most sites in summer and higher biomass in Porto Sul than on most sites in winter
there were no significant interactions or differences in colonization among sites or seasons
in summer the total cover ranged from 90 to 97%
Seaweeds biomass at study sites on reef edge
There was a significant difference in the total macroalgal biomass among habitats (Figure 4A, F = 4.85, p ≤ 0.05), which was higher at the reef base and lower at both reef flat and edge. Similarly, total algae cover did not differ significantly among reef habitats (ANOVA F = 0.65; p > 0.05). In relation to algae functional groups, coralline crusts were present at the reef base and edge, but absent on the reef flat (Figure 4B
Filamentous algae were abundant at the reef base and edge and absent on the reef flat (ANOVA F = 10.74; p ≤ 0.001)
Foliose algae were present only at the reef base (ANOVA F = 3.38; p ≤ 0.05)
Non-calcareous crusts were abundant in all habitats
and were dominant at the reef flat (ANOVA F = 38.56; p ≤ 0.0001)
Seaweeds biomass (A) and seaweeds cover (B) in different habitats at Mato Verde
Analysis of variance for marginal growth rate of Porolithon onkodes and Lithophyllum stictaeforme and vertical growth of L
stictaeforme in study sites in summer and winter
growth was positive in summer and negative in winter (ANOVA F = 30.35; p ≤ 0.001)
In Mato Verde and Porto Sul growth was negative in summer and positive in winter
but differences between seasons were not significant (ANOVA F = 2.10; p > 0.05 and F = 1.70; p > 0.05
In summer growth could not be measured at Porto Norte because samples were lost due to strong wave surge
Relative marginal growth of Porolithon onkodes at study sites on reef edge
and Lithophyllum stictaeforme in summer (C) and winter (D)
Vertical growth rate of L. stictaeforme showed a similar pattern as marginal growth with a significant interaction among seasons and sites. Again Caldeiros showed different growth rates from all other sites but only in winter. (Figures 6A,B and Table 2)
there was a positive growth in summer and negative in winter
In Mato Verde and Porto Sul there was no significative difference between summer and winter (respectively
ANOVA F = 1.49; p > 0.05 and F = 0.81; p > 0.05)
Comparing marginal relative growth among habitats there was a significant difference for P. onkodes (Figure 7A, ANOVA F = 11.76; p ≤ 0.001), being higher on the reef edge and reef base and zero on reef flat. However, L. stictaeforme, had an inconspicuous marginal growth on both edge and base and zero on the reef flat, so differences was not significant among habitats. (Figure 7B
There was also no significant difference in vertical growth for L
stictaeforme among habitats (ANOVA F = 0.67; p > 0.05)
since growth was negative on both edge and base and zero on the reef flat
Epiphyte algae overgrew some coralline crusts but this cover was not enough to interfere with their growth in any habitat
stictaeforme (B) in different habitats at Mato Verde
and low levels in the laboratory (A) and in the field (B) showing the net photosynthesis
Coralline crusts colonized reef edges and bases but did not grow on the reef flat, similar to non-calcareous crusts. Despite both crustose groups being able to survive most disturbances (Dethier, 1994; Steneck and Dethier, 1994), coralline crusts are easily bleached when exposed to air although they can be protected from high light intensities by epiphyte cover (Figueiredo et al., 2000)
The success of CCA depends not only on the capacity of recruits to resist disturbance
but also on their ability to occupy space through marginal vegetative growth
studies elsewhere have based their estimates of growth on small individuals during early colonization and thus
they proportionally detected greater marginal extension rates
onkodes crusts was positive at all sites in both seasons
especially non-calcareous crusts may have influenced crustose coralline growth because they were abundant when growth was reduced or absent
stictaeforme crusts were negative or absent in most sites in both seasons
but significantly higher in Caldeiros in summer
This result can also be related to epiphytic cover mainly by non-calcareous crusts and articulated calcareous algae
onkodes was positive on the reef edge and base
which could be explained by desiccation plus high epiphytic cover of non-calcareous crusts
The minute or imperceptible marginal growth of L
stictaeforme might also have resulted from desiccation and epiphytes
which out-competed coralline crusts on the reef flats
suggesting that these fishes contribute to the dispersion of seaweeds on reefs
In the laboratory P. onkodes usually responded better than L. stictaeforme under low irradiance, but under 68 μmol m−2 s−1 both species showed negative net O2 production, which indicates that this level is beneath their compensation point (Bessell-Browne et al., 2017)
onkodes was more productive under irradiance levels up to 623 μmol m−2 s−1
showed negative growth when exposed to 218 μmol m−2 s−1
Lithophyllum stictaeforme responded positively
to equivalent levels of irradiance (143 μmol m−2 s−1)
but was photo-inhibited under irradiance up to 408 μmol m−2 s−1
onkodes not only grew better but was also more productive in environments subjected to high irradiance
Crustose corallines were as abundant on the reef edge as on the reef base
thus it was assumed that the deposition of sediments trapped by erect seaweeds was too low to affect CCA
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest
We would like to thank the staff of the National Marine Park of Abrolhos who supported field work
Abrolhos Turismo for helping with boat transportation
and the Brazilian Navy for their hospitality
Instituto Brasileiro do Meio Ambiente – IBAMA issued a research the license IBAMA 026/2000 for collecting samples
We are also grateful to Gary Andrew Kendrick from University of Western Australia for improving the English version and for their important comments
Comments and suggestions from the Editor NS and two reviewers improved the early version of the manuscript
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Citation: Tâmega FTS and Figueiredo MAO (2019) Colonization
Growth and Productivity of Crustose Coralline Algae in Sunlit Reefs in the Atlantic Southernmost Coral Reef
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Cotriguaçu Sempre Verde (CSV) is an initiative to promote social and economic development in the municipality of Cotriguaçu in northwestern Mato Grosso
through conservation and sustainable management of natural resources
The initiative is led by the Instituto Centro de Vida (ICV)
which has focused initially on helping landowners come into compliance with environmental regulations and encouraging them to adopt more sustainable production practices
These activities are expected to simultaneously reduce deforestation and forest degradation in the municipality and promote local development
By engaging multiple stakeholders from many different sectors
ICV is taking a revolutionary approach to the environmental governance of a subnational jurisdiction
CSV is organized into five components: (i) structuring municipal environmental management; (ii) support for sustainable forest management; (iii) promotion of best agricultural practices; (iv) support for natural resource governance in land reform settlements; and (v) integration of the Rikbaktsa indigenous group (ICV 2011)
ICV is seeking to develop local ownership of the initiative by engaging with and building confidence among indigenous groups
small farmers and the municipal government of Cotriguaçu
the initiative offers important lessons for other initiatives pursuing a multisectorial and multistakeholder approach (ICV 2011)
Cotriguaçu municipality covers 9123 km2 in northwestern Mato Grosso (Figure 4.1) in the Brazilian Legal Amazon
Several rivers pass through the municipality
which has the largest volume of all rivers in Mato Grosso
Around 25% of the municipality has level terrain
with an average elevation of 240 m (IBGE 2014a)
and the predominant vegetation is dense rain forest
and the average annual rainfall is 2750 mm
The dry season occurs from May to September
and the wet season occurs from October to April with the greatest rainfall intensity in January through March (IBGE 2014a)
Cotriguaçu was traditionally occupied by indigenous peoples
particularly the Rikbaktsa group who speak the Tupi language
the Cooperativa Central Regional Iguaçu Ltda.
bought one million ha of land in northwest Mato Grosso
They planned to sell land to small producers from southern Brazil where agricultural land was scarce
due partly to the creation of the reservoir for the Iguaçu Dam
The first immigrants began arriving in Cotriguaçu in 1984
Juruena municipality – which included Cotriguaçu – was created (Guerra in press)
Cotriguaçu became an independent municipality
INCRA launched a second phase of colonization in the municipality
attracting families from other parts of Mato Grosso and nearby states including Mato Grosso do Sul and Rondônia
This colonization has meant continued rapid population growth in the region (Guerra in press)
Figure 4.1 Map of the REDD+ initiative in Cotriguaçu
Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística
In addition to small farmers and the Rikbaktsa indigenous group
there are large private landholders in Cotriguaçu
Privately owned lands occupy 54% of the municipality
the Parque Nacional do Juruena (14% of the total area); an indigenous territory
Terra Indigena Escondido (18% of the total area); and three land reform settlements (Projetos de Assentamento or PAs) – Juruena
Nova Cotriguaçu and CEDERES II (14% of the total area)
The most important economic sectors are forestry
agroindustry and small-scale agriculture (production of food for consumption in the municipality)
Logging was the main source of employment in Cotriguaçu in the 1990s
but is currently in decline due to improved control of illegal logging and conversion of forest to agricultural fields and pasture
the most important drivers of deforestation are cattle ranching and small-scale agriculture
Cotriguaçu’s population grew from 4379 inhabitants in 1996 to 14,983 in 2010 (IBGE 2014a)
The Human Development Index (HDI) of Cotriguaçu was 0.721 in 2005
slightly lower than the national HDI of 0.76 (UNDP 2005)
Small farmers in the land reform settlements (representing about 80% of the municipal population) are generally considered the most disadvantaged people in the municipality
we report results from a survey of 122 households in four communities in the three land reform settlements included in the CSV intervention area
ICV initially partnered with the Mato Grosso SEMA and TNC
which focuses on municipal environmental management
TNC initially played a key role in bringing landowners into compliance with environmental regulations
specifically by helping them register in CAR
Registration in CAR has been required by the Brazilian Forest Code since 2012
and is widely considered to be a necessary first step for REDD+
other partners that have joined the initiative include the International department of Office National des Forêts (ONF-I)
the Instituto Floresta Tropical (IFT) and EMBRAPA (the Brazilian federal agency for agricultural research)
ONF-I was invited due to its previous experience with reforestation and carbon sequestration in the municipality
and IFT was invited due to its vast expertise in promoting sustainable forest management throughout the Amazon
In addition to sustainable forest management
ONF-I is supporting activities related to agroforestry
environmental education and technical training for small producers
EMBRAPA is collaborating with ICV to promote best practices among cattle ranchers in the municipality
ICV supported the formation of Cotriguaçu’s Municipal Council of Environment (CMMA)
which has held regular meetings since 2012 to debate various issues related to public management and the environment (not limited to forests)
CMMA has sought to reduce forest fires in the municipality by developing materials on fire prevention and disseminating them in places where fire outbreaks are common
Mato Grosso has historically been one of the states in the Brazilian Amazon with the highest deforestation rates (Governo do Estado do Mato Grosso
it included 20 of the 43 municipalities ‘blacklisted’ by the Ministry of Environment for their high deforestation rates
about 38% of the area originally under forest cover in the state had been deforested
northwestern Mato Grosso is the last forest frontier in the state
located in the ‘arc of deforestation’ of the Amazon
the region has been a top priority in recent efforts to curb deforestation (Governo do Estado do Mato Grosso
the state government of Mato Grosso decided to take action to address the state’s reputation as one of the leaders of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon (Governo do Estado do Mato Grosso
the state developed the Mato Grosso Action Plan for the Control of Deforestation and Fires (PPCDQ MT) with the goal of reducing deforestation in the state by 80% by 2020 (as compared to the average deforestation rate in 1996 – 2005)
TNC and SEMA began discussing a potential state REDD+ proposal as a way to capture funding for the implementation of the PPCDQ MT
the REDD+ technical working group from Mato Grosso designed the REDD+ State Law (9878/2013)
This law could eventually strengthen the CSV initiative
The working group is seeking to make the process as participatory as possible
reflecting the positions of all societal sectors
ICV planned to implement a REDD+ initiative in the entire northwest portion of Mato Grosso
with a total area of 108,000 km2 and a population of 120,000 people (Governo do Estado do Mato Grosso
The high costs and other challenges associated with implementing such a broad initiative
led ICV and partners to start with a pilot in a smaller area
After spending several months (in 2009–2010) analyzing potential pilot sites based on deforestation rates
the land tenure situation and other key factors
they finally selected the municipality of Cotriguaçu
when ICV submitted a proposal to the Packard Foundation and diagnostic activities began on the ground (Figure 4.2)
There had been other forest conservation efforts in Cotriguaçu prior to the CSV project
the Pilot Program to Protect Tropical Forests developed activities in northwestern Mato Grosso
the United Nations Development Programme started a rural development project
These projects sought to improve both forest and non-forest livelihoods
and they engaged local political stakeholders such as SEMA
the Rural Development Association of Juruena
the Juruena Municipal Secretariat of Agriculture and the Instituto Pró-Natura
Figure 4.2 Timeline of the REDD+ initiative in Cotriguaçu
CSV intends to reduce deforestation and forest degradation and hence GHG emissions
Benefit-sharing mechanisms do not include direct cash payments
but rather are focused on the promotion of sustainable production activities among various stakeholder groups
ICV and partners were initially interested in implementing a REDD+ pilot project
as reflected in their 2009 proposal to the Packard Foundation entitled “Developing the Northwest Mato Grosso REDD Pilot Project.” An REL for the intervention area was developed in 2010 through linear projection of pre-initiative deforestation rates from 2000 to 2008 using data from PRODES (2008)
The reference level is 14,000 ha of deforestation per year
which corresponds to approximately 7.1 million tCO2e emitted annually
the initiative was granted funding by Fundo Vale for implementation of CSV
CSV is no longer considered a REDD+ initiative by its proponents
mostly due to the uncertainties and differing perspectives on REDD+
If (and when) the funding and rules for REDD+ become clearer
then the municipality of Cotriguaçu could be well positioned to launch a REDD+ initiative based on CSV
In terms of (i) structuring municipal environmental management
ICV’s principal approach has been to provide support for CMMA
and to back CAR implementation on private properties and in land reform settlements
Support for CMMA includes establishment of a geotechnology laboratory for environmental monitoring and a regular meeting process (both started in July 2011)
the Government of Mato Grosso has required implementation of CAR to promote compliance with the Brazilian Forest Code
While large landowners bear the costs of registering their properties in the CAR system
the municipal government of Cotriguaçu subsidizes the costs for small properties (up to 400 ha)
To provide (ii) support for sustainable forest management
ICV partnered with IFT and ONF-I to implement the Programa de Desenvolvimento do Bom Manejo Florestal no Estado do Mato Grosso (PRODEMFLOR) program
PRODEMFLOR seeks to increase the number and improve the quality of sustainable forest management plans by offering technical training in skills needed to develop these plans
It is a voluntary membership program in which forest entrepreneurs submit their management plans to an independent monitoring group and commit to improving their practices
producers receive advice and technical training
PRODEMFLOR has been less successful than expected in Cotriguaçu due to the difficulty of establishing a formal agreement between the various organizations involved and an overall lack of efficiency in approving sustainable forest management plans
There is still ongoing dialogue with some timber producers
and PRODEMFLOR’s annual monitoring still occurs
The (iii) best agricultural practices component focuses on improving cattle ranching practices
this component promotes: (1) implementation of technology developed by the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (EMBRAPA; Guide for Good Agro-pastoral Practices); (2) access to subsidized credit to finance large-scale investment in pasture recovery and recuperation of Permanent Protection Areas (APPs); and (3) involvement of production chain stakeholders in debates about improving cattle production systems
Considering the current situation of animal husbandry in the region and the lack of good examples for landowners
the first step of the program is to develop innovative and replicable models of sustainable production systems for beef and milk
The (iv) support for natural resource governance in rural settlements is the component that is most directly related to the communities sampled by CIFOR-GCS
It is operationalized through the Rural Development Initiative
which seeks to support traditional rural communities (family farmers and indigenous groups) in their organization and planning
and development of low-impact production technologies following the principles of agroecology
(v) integration of the Rikbáktsa indigenous group
focuses on the creation of a management plan for the Escondido Indigenous Land
which comprises the largest forested area in the municipality of Cotriguaçu
ICV’s move away from REDD+ in CSV was particularly important in relation to this stakeholder group
the National Indian Foundation (FUNAI) declared that some REDD+ initiatives had fraudulent practices
citing as an example community leaders signing documents without the effective support of their communities
ICV engaged in dialogue with the Rikbaktsa tribe and slowly built confidence through a focus on the participatory design of the Escondido Indigenous Land management plan
The Rikbaktsa tribe showed interest if community members could participate as co-managers of the initiative
and as a result various ethnographic studies and activities were carried out and the indigenous management plan was elaborated
The current goal is to incorporate this management plan into the municipal environmental management plan of Cotriguaçu
there are also other development and conservation initiatives taking place in Cotriguaçu
Coopercotri is a cooperative that opened in Cotriguaçu in 2012 to support the commercialization of rural agricultural products
but ended up seeking to address needs related to the processing of coffee; the wholesale trade of agricultural pesticides
fertilizers and soil correctives as well as the wholesale trade of fruits
the Balde Cheio (Full Bucket) project is a partnership between EMBRAPA
SEBRAE (Serviço de Apoio às Micro e Pequenas Empresas
an agency that supports small business) and local partners to provide technical support to improve milk production and commercialization
and to try to ensure that local producers have guaranteed outlets for their products
Luz para Todos (Light for All) is a national program of rural electrification
which has reached all of the communities included in the CIFOR-GCS sample (COT1 and COT2 more than a year before the other two)
improvements to the unpaved highway connecting the municipalities of Cotriguaçu and Juruena have benefited the inhabitants of Cotriguaçu
which is a federal government program of conditional cash transfers
has been actively enrolling and making payments to families in Cotriguaçu since 2009
the strategy of the military government in Brazil was to occupy lands in the Amazon in order to protect it from foreign invaders as well as to provide land to landless people
Only in the 1990s were these settlements established in Cotriguaçu and
none of the settlers in these settlements have obtained land titles (Guerra in press)
Our sample includes smallholders in four communities among the three different land reform settlements in Cotriguaçu
and households are normally distributed along narrow
and people who frequent the same church are associated with the same community
people who attend the same church live along the same road
Each community has its own internal political organization
which allows households to lodge complaints with government officials or request goods and services for the community
In all the political associations (except for religious organizations)
representatives are elected by members of the association
Female participation is not common in these political organizations
but women are becoming conscious that they need to organize themselves to be able to fight for their interests
where there is a women’s organization focused on improving access to markets
Table 4.1 lists the institutions in each sample community
Table 4.1 Institutions present in the four communities
Small Rural Producers Association of Nova Aliança (political)
Table 4.2 presents some basic characteristics of the communities studied
whereas the newest community was founded in 2006
they all face transportation problems during the rainy season
COT4 is the only community with a full set of basic infrastructure
including a primary and secondary school and a health center
This is because the community is located in the largest land reform settlement area in the municipality
which has a large block of voters and is represented by a small-producers association that has actively and effectively pressured the government to provide these services
Table 4.2 Characteristics of the four communities studied based on the 2011 survey
Road usable by four-wheel drive vehicles in all seasons
Distance to closest market by most common means of transport (km/min)
Crop with highest production value per household on average
Price of a hectare of good quality agricultural land (low-high) (USD)a
rice was unanimously reported as the main dietary staple
but it was primarily used to feed small livestock
Many small farmers turned to urban markets to buy rice
often imported from southern Brazil at substantial cost
The specific reasons given for limited local production of rice varied by community
but many people blamed the difficulty of transporting rice to market due to the poor condition of the roads
as well as damage by wild pigs (Pecari tacaju) and by diseases
Table 4.3 presents basic socioeconomic characteristics of sampled households
adults (≥16 years old) had studied for approximately five years on average in all communities
adults were unable to work on average 7–17 days in the 12-month period prior to the interview (2010–2011) due to health problems
more than 50% of households had private toilets
There was high variation in total household income among communities
total annual income was nearly 50% higher than in the community with the lowest income (COT3)
In the community with the highest average household income (COT2)
the average land holding was the smallest and there were significant conflicts over land tenure
Table 4.3 Socioeconomic characteristics of households interviewed in 2011
Years of education (adults ≥ 16 years old)
Total value of transportation assets (USD)
a Total annual income (12 months prior to survey) from agriculture
in USD; currency converted using yearly average provided by the World Bank
b Total livestock value at the time of interview
other natural habitat and residential areas controlled by the household
COT3 and COT4 barely had access to electricity
whereas COT1 and COT2 were almost fully served by electricity
This difference was due to the government Luz para Todos Program
which was present in COT1 and COT2 and about to arrive in the other two communities
Phone communication is another limitation in Cotriguaçu
Cell phone reception was rare in the four communities
which they would use when they traveled to areas with cell phone reception
household transportation choices seemed to depend on distance to the nearest city
COT2 and COT3 are not far from the city and are therefore served by regular collective transport
Households in these communities had therefore invested an average of only USD 3000 in transportation assets
with highly irregular collective transport
and households had invested much more in motorcycles and other private transportation assets
Figure 4.3 shows that cattle ranching generated more than a third (34%) of the total income reported by households in the four communities studied
Households in all of the communities except for COT3 are highly reliant on agriculture
including both cattle and crops (Figure 4.4)
income from the forest and the environment was negligible
The importance of “other income” highlights the role of government transfers (e.g
Bolsa Família and pensions) in the local economy
wage labor is also a significant source of income
This is due to medium and large landholders around the land reform settlements hiring smallholders to maintain their farms
One large producer stated that small producers play an important role in sustaining the livelihoods of large landholders and expressed concern that this labor force is being lost due to outmigration from the settlements
although other evidence suggests that outmigration has decreased due to improved conditions (such as electricity) in the settlements
Figure 4.3 Sources of income for all households in sample (n = 122)
Figure 4.4 Sources of income for average household by community (or village) (+/- SE) (n = 122)
Table 4.4 presents the relationship between people and the forest in the four communities
Although the average time needed to walk to the forest was less than an hour in all communities
only a few household members reported having occupations related to forests
households in that community reported that only 2% of their income came from forest products
households in the sample communities in Cotriguaçu show minimal reliance on forest products
The most important forest product is charcoal
there is now increasing interest in products derived from babaçu (Orbignya phalerata)
a palm that locals had considered a pest because it invades pastures
ICV considers babaçu to have great economic potential for small producers since it can be transformed into many different commercial products such as oil (from the fruits)
charcoal (from the coconut cover) and handicrafts (from the palm leaf)
Table 4.4 Indicators of household forest dependence based on the 2011 survey
With agriculture as a primary or secondary occupation (adults ≥ 16 years old)c
With a forest-based primary or secondary occupation (adults ≥ 16 years old)d
Reporting increased consumption of forest productse
Reporting decreased consumption of forest productse
Obtaining cash income from forest productsf
Reporting an increase in cash income from forestf
Reporting a decrease in cash income from forestf
Reporting fuelwood or charcoal as primary cooking source
Reporting decreased opportunity for clearing forestg
of hectares cleared over the past two years among households that reported clearing of any forest
of hectares left fallow among households that reported leaving any land fallow
c Percentage of households with at least one adult reporting cropping as a primary or secondary livelihood
d Percentage of households with at least one adult reporting forestry as a primary or secondary livelihood
e Percentage of households among those that reported any consumption of forest products over the past two years
f Percentage of households among those that reported any cash income from forest products over the past two years
households in these communities are seeking to construct livelihoods around cattle ranching for milk or beef production
households are also reducing their reliance on cultivation of crops as they shift into cattle ranching
producers reported that they sometimes were obliged to buy maize from neighboring municipalities in order to feed their animals
some small producers have consolidated large areas of pasture by buying out settlers who have abandoned their settlement areas
many small producers dream of becoming large cattle ranchers
Cattle ranching has changed Cotriguaçu’s forested landscape into extensive pastures
Mato Grosso is a difficult state for NGOs to work in due to the ongoing duel between environmentalists and defenders of BAU development
These opposite visions are considered the first obstacle for the CSV initiative
CSV must be seen as something beneficial for all groups involved or its success will be compromised
Since CSV is not currently linked to the sale of carbon credits
but rather to articulation among several sectors to reduce deforestation and forest degradation
the different local stakeholders involved in CSV have notably different goals due to their divergent views on land use
This creates a challenge for institutionalizing the program locally and meeting the demands of these different sectors while maintaining a holistic vision for sustainable development in the municipality
There is also a temporal component related to the governance challenge
there is the culture of discontinuity of policy initiatives from opposing parties
A political party will rarely continue an initiative from the opposition party – even if the initiative is beneficial for local people – simply because it represents a different political position
there is a risk that the municipal government in Cotriguaçu might not support CSV in the future if there are big changes in leadership resulting from electoral politics
This is another reason that ICV has promoted strong local autonomy for CSV in order to promote its continuity
the focus on multiple stakeholders in CSV has not been free of criticism within local civil society groups
some members of local NGOs have expressed concern about the potential side effects of including owners of medium and large cattle ranches in CSV
The argument is that incentives for cattle ranching activities in a heavily forested municipality
could stimulate the opening of more areas for cattle raising through producers envisaging higher profits
ICV had to work on its own internal ‘multistakeholder’ process
since the staff who worked with indigenous people had a different vision than those who worked with cattle ranchers
This initial internal organizational work was key to being able to work subsequently with a diversity of external actors (personal communication from R Farias
even though there have been improvements in the highway connecting Cotriguaçu and Juruena
local road infrastructure still represents a large barrier to any conservation and development initiative
the roads in Cotriguaçu are of poor quality
and many areas remain isolated during the rainy season
This limited access represents a substantial obstacle for marketing of products
This presents a barrier to CSV’s efforts to promote sustainable production
due to the difficulty of accessing markets
The evolution of CSV reflects a common trend among subnational REDD+ initiatives in the Brazilian Amazon
The initial idea of the REDD+ Pilot Program in Northwestern Mato Grosso was to compensate people for avoided deforestation
which was in line with the international discussions at that time
local producers in Cotriguaçu caught wind of this
and there were stories of people planting trees on their properties with the goal of receiving direct economic benefits
like other subnational REDD+ initiatives in Brazil
CSV took a direction that did not include direct cash payments and stopped being identified as REDD+
mostly due to the lack of progress on REDD+ at the international level
While proponent organizations needed to mend some initial expectations regarding the receipt of immediate cash benefits
CSV evolved to incorporate a broader vision of promoting green development in the municipality through responding to local demands and building confidence with multiple stakeholders
CSV is not the only multistakeholder initiative of this scope in the Brazilian Amazon
but it provides some important lessons for this kind of approach
it offers an innovative example of creating a multistakeholder team within the proponent organization itself
and internally working through conflicts associated with different values and visions
in order to work effectively with the diverse actors in Cotriguaçu
it demonstrates the challenges and importance of promoting local autonomy for an initiative
and truly listening to the demands of different stakeholder groups when formulating intervention strategies
even if they conflict with the proponent’s ideas
even though ICV views biodiversity conservation through the strengthening of protected areas as important
it is not currently a priority issue for local stakeholders
while ICV can bring the issue into local discussions
CSV highlights the importance of linking to broader initiatives
Cotriguaçu still requires more infrastructure and greater political maturity to accommodate it
There is a need to find a way to internalize these practices
but also into the political agenda of the municipality so that they will not be forgotten after the next election
Demonstration of the early positive effects of CSV could be one way to strengthen the initiative and keep it on the political agenda of the municipality over the longer term
This study would not have been possible without the support of people from Cotriguaçu
who were kind and helpful to our research team
and without the support of team members: Cássia Santos
We would also like to express our special gratitude to Renato Farias
Márcia Andretta and the people of the communities in our sample
We also thank Renato Farias and Erin Sills for their comments on earlier drafts
CSV
is the name for the first phase of the Northwest Mato Grosso REDD+ Pilot Project
which was initiated in 2009 to promote forest conservation in order to offset carbon emissions and as a tool to mitigate climate change
Details about Fundo Vale can be found at their website: www.fundovale.org.br
After selecting the initial 30
we selected 10 extra names to place on a waiting list
We drew names from that waiting list to substitute for the few respondents who were not available or willing to complete the interview
the world’s largest remaining tropical forest
or 85% of the Brazilian Amazon and 43% of Brazil’s land area
aggressive land development strategies made Brazil the world’s largest deforesting country: annual forest loss peaked in 1995 and again in 2004
with much of that cleared land ending up as cattle pasture
Timber extraction still only plays a minor and indirect role in Brazil’s forest carbon losses
Large- and smallholders alike contribute to deforestation
facilitated by policy drivers such as subsidized agricultural credits
large-scale road building and resettlement programs (May et al
The resettlement programs involve the colonization of smallholders into land reform settlements managed by Brazil’s agrarian reform institute
where there are typically high levels of deforestation due in part to the use of forest clearing as a way to secure tenure rights (Brandão et al
Brazil has gradually cut Amazon deforestation by a spectacular 79%
to ‘just’ 0.6 million ha in 2012 (INPE 2014a)
This reduction mostly predated the emergence of REDD+ as an international initiative: it was the result of a series of policies
plus a slowdown in the growth of commodity prices that curbed private investments in land clearing (Assunção et al
many deforestation-sensitive civil society representatives entered the Lula administration
and the Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Deforestation in the Amazon Region (PPCDAM) has since functioned as an interministerial coordination tool
19 million ha of new protected areas were created
and large tracts of indigenous territories also gained official recognition
Satellite-based monitoring of changes in forest cover
principally by the National Institute for Space Research (INPE)
empowered timely command-and-control enforcement actions by Brazil’s environmental police
IBAMA – perhaps the single most effective action to curb deforestation
Municipalities with high deforestation were blacklisted and consequently blocked from certain resource transfers from central government
municipalities had to register 80% of their private properties in the CAR system – a step toward compliance with the Brazilian Forest Code and tenure regularization – and reduce the area deforested annually below predetermined thresholds
commodity roundtables increased private sector environmental compliance in supply chains
Brazil thus became an ‘early bird’ showcase for how REDD+ countries could potentially turn around high-deforestation scenarios to mitigate forest carbon emissions substantially (UNEP 2012)
Acre and Mato Grosso played proactive roles in achieving these conservation gains
including through six Amazonian states’ participation in the Governors’ Climate and Forests Task Force
over 50 Brazilian subnational REDD+ initiatives emerged
the highest among all tropical countries (CIFOR 2014)
Many of these initiatives are supported by the Amazon Fund
funded by USD 1 billion from Norway for 2008–2015 (plus some German and national Petrobras funds)
is managed by the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) and supports projects by government agencies
NGOs and universities that demonstrate a direct or indirect contribution to reducing deforestation and degradation (Amazon Fund 2014)
Various state governments also participated in subnational initiatives or have since created jurisdictional REDD+ programs
Perhaps the most interesting potential of these subnational initiatives is to pilot intervention mixes at subnational scales of aggregation
It has been argued that the recent successful anti-deforestation policies at the national level have emphasized ‘sticks’ over ‘carrots,’ putting most opportunity costs of avoided deforestation on Amazon land users
which calls into question the political sustainability of these drastic reductions (Börner et al
many subnational initiatives are pursuing more balanced policy mixes of forest law enforcement (negative) incentives
conditional and/or nonconditional landholder (positive) incentives
and land-tenure regularization (enabling) measures
The customization of these intervention mixes to different subnational REDD+ contexts may thus also provide some valuable lessons about how to design national policy mixes
Brazil is currently developing a legal framework for REDD+ implementation
under a working group led by the Ministry of Environment
and is also being informed by pilot REDD+ experiences
such as Juma – the oldest Brazilian REDD+ initiative (Börner et al
2013; also see Chapter 3: Bolsa Floresta Initiative)
Subnational initiatives could cross-fertilize these complex national efforts
the Brazilian case also features significant challenges on how to equitably share REDD+ benefits across levels of governance (local
forested countries with multilevel governance structures
Smaller Buffer Zones Would Further Reduce Protection from Exposure
“People living near industrial farms in Mato Grosso are already being poisoned by pesticides and experiencing higher rates of cancer and miscarriage, and reducing buffer zones will only exacerbate this public health crisis,” said Julia Bleckner
senior health and human rights researcher at Human Rights Watch
“The buffer zone bill is part of a worrying trend of deregulation of pesticides in Brazil
underscoring the dangerous influence of agribusiness over policymaking.”
Mato Grosso lawmakers should reject the bill
Even the best buffer zones are not sufficient to protect communities and workers from the harms of exposure to certain pesticides used in Brazil, many of which are banned or severely restricted for use in the EU
and elsewhere because of their links to health or environmental harms
some activists and policymakers said that it is difficult and at times risky to research
and seek to regulate pesticides in Mato Grosso
As a prosecutor said, “Mato Grosso is an epicenter of agribusiness…
It is definitely a challenge working on this issue
you won’t advance.” Researchers studying the health impact of pesticide use in Mato Grosso said that landowners had threatened them during their investigations
Despite banning their use within their own borders, European countries continue to export many of these banned pesticides to the global south
Companies in the EU are not only manufacturing and exporting pesticides that are considered too harmful for their own citizens
they are exporting them to places where regulations to protect people against them are weak
On October 16, the Brazilian government committed to a long-awaited National Pesticide Reduction Plan set to launch on December 3 aimed at phasing out highly hazardous pesticides
especially those banned in the EU and elsewhere
and investing in organic and agroecological alternatives
“It is unreasonable for pesticides that are banned in the world to be freely sold here,” Márcio Macêdo
minister of the General Secretariat of the Presidency
All states, including Brazil and pesticide-exporting governments, have an obligation to protect people’s rights to health, life, livelihoods, and a healthy environment. When it comes to health and the environment, countries have a duty to apply the precautionary principle
meaning that countries should regulate pesticides to limit or prohibit their use when there is reason or evidence to believe that they may be harmful
The Brazilian government should take this opportunity to build a forceful strategy that targets pesticides banned in the EU and other harmful pesticides and should invest in building substantial support for organic and agroecological farming
“Mato Grosso state legislators should reject the buffer zone bill,” Bleckner said
“Instead of bringing pesticides closer to communities
policymakers in Mato Grosso should listen to public health experts in the state who have called for expanded buffer zones
more stringent monitoring and regulation of pesticides
bans on pesticides that are highly hazardous
and substantial investment in ecologically sound agriculture.”
Some Quilombola and Indigenous leaders said that the health effects of pesticides sprayed by nearby industrial farms effectively forced them to move from their land
farms will be allowed to spray pesticides even closer to communities
forcing more people to face the impossible choice of suffering significant health effects or leaving their land
Winti Suya, an indigenous leader of the Khikatxi village of the Suya people in Wawi Indigenous territory, made the decision in 2018 to move the entire village 30 kilometers to escape pesticides drifting into their territory
the planting became very intense and more frequent
sprayed first by tractor and then by plane
They come from the farm and arrive in our village
and many diseases started to appear.… The people decided with me to leave and make this move to build a new village
we made the decision that the health of the population was more important
and to take our people as far away from the pesticides as possible
Suya fears that the pesticides drifting from the nearby farms are still affecting the health of his community
He also remains concerned that the pesticides could reach the community through the river that passes through farms before reaching the village:
We are concerned about pesticides that could reach the water and the fish in the river
because we feed on these fish from the river and the game from the forest
We want to do a study to find out if our water contains pesticides because the headwaters of the river where we live are all within the soybean farm.… It concerns all of us
all human beings who live in this municipality of Querência
All the residents need quality nature and water
Small-scale Indigenous and Quilombola farmers also said that repeated exposure to pesticides sprayed by nearby industrial farms contributed to loss of livelihood and food for the community as well as plants used for traditional medicinal purposes
“This year we tried to plant but couldn’t harvest anything because of the pesticides,” said a member of a Quilombola community with farms about 700km away
so we got corn seed with support from FASE [a nongovernmental organization]
but the corn grew without kernels,” she said
Farms using pesticides in Mato Grosso are required to maintain a 300-meter buffer zone from communities and their water sources for ground spraying and a 500-meter buffer zone for aerial spraying
multiple people interviewed described exposure to pesticides
indicating that the buffer zone is being violated
A member of a Quilombo described the health symptoms she and others experience after pesticides are sprayed nearby
Especially in the early hours of the morning…
It happened [once] when we had to return from a walk
There was a very strong cloud coming towards us
so we had to turn back from the walk to avoid running into it
we already feel that something is bothering us…
An Indigenous healthcare worker in Mato Grosso said that people in the community he serves often get rashes when they bathe in the stream during rainy season
when the rain washes pesticides into the stream
“you can bathe in the stream with no symptoms,” he said
“the rain takes the poison from the farms and brings it in the river.”
The chief of a village in the Sangradouro territory of the Xavante Indigenous people also described health problems from the river during the rainy season
He said that the Rio das Mortes (“River of Deaths”) travels through farmland before reaching their village
He said that “it tastes different in the rainy season
The fish die in the rainy season.” Those effects started 17 years ago because of pesticides
The leader of another Indigenous community said that one of their villages is about 500 meters from a farm and that “during spraying season
the smell of poison reaches the Indigenous community…
I even felt the urge to vomit when I was on the road one day when a plane flew over us spraying
I've experienced it myself and I speak from personal experience.”
He said that even though the planes do not spray directly over the Indigenous community
the wind carries the pesticides into their community
underscoring the importance of larger buffer zones
“The plane flies over the edge of the territory and it only sprays their crops
but the wind blows it into the Indigenous area,” he said
who experienced an incident of acute poisoning in 2017 while studying at a school about 15 meters from a farm
That night there was a strong smell when I arrived
until I had thrown up all I had in my stomach and was just retching
I felt sick the day after with nausea and headache
The morning after I took milk and began to feel better but even my school uniform had the smell of pesticides
Small-scale farmers described the loss of their own crops after repeated exposure to pesticides from large farms nearby
A member of a Quilombo said that the crops lost due to pesticides would have been used primarily for consumption in the community and described a culture of exchange between residents
When asked how she knew the crop failure was due to pesticides
she said: “We have knowledge about the plants
Multiple communities shared concerns about the impact of pesticides on creole corn seed
A member of a Quilombo said that creole corn is frequently used for the community
“But today we see several other Quilombo communities that lost their seeds as a result of the spraying of the pesticide on the monoculture soybeans
referring to a common practice in industrial agriculture in which farms grow one species of a crop over a large area
They were no longer able to keep those creole seeds since they were contaminated as a result of the neighbor’s spraying
this has a direct impact on our territories
[but] you can’t harvest because of the pesticide that is sprayed
A Quilombola researcher in a Quilombo said that pesticides have also affected medicinal plants
some of which have disappeared in the past ten years: “What you plant will grow but they don’t give fruit as before
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genetically modified cotton was planted in an illegal area in Mato Grosso state
openly disregarding a biosafety measures created by the Ministry of Agriculture
Mongabay found plantations of GM cotton in the municipality of Marcelândia
641 kilometers (400 miles) from the state capital Cuiabá
where agribusiness is the main economic activity
Until early May 2024, genetically modified cotton plantations were banned from 31 municipalities in Mato Grosso, in an area considered an exclusion zone under Ministry of Agriculture Ordinance 437
a government corporation that holds GM cotton patents
was aimed at preventing contamination of native cotton
a natural seed used by family farmers as well as Indigenous and Quilombola communities
A seed is considered genetically modified when it receives a gene from another living being in order to acquire some new characteristic
usually resistance to pests and herbicides
which favors large-scale production intended for export — the basis of Brazil’s agribusiness
Genetically modified seeds have been planted within the exclusion zone since 2019
commercial-scale cultivation began at the Nossa Senhora de Nazaré farm
Both are owned by mega-producer Gilson Pinesso and are located in Marcelândia
a municipality with just over 10,000 inhabitants
a 5-hectare (12-acre) plantation yielded 320 arrobas or 4,800 kilograms (10,580 pounds) of cotton
commercial plantations at the Nossa Senhora de Nazaré farm
a cotton arroba is now sold for 124.65 reais ($22) on average
We interviewed Gilson Pinesso by telephone
We asked him for details about the beginning of the harvest as well as the type of seed used
We also asked if he knew that the ban imposed by the federal government was still in force when he started planting with the genetically modified seeds
Piinesso admitted to committing the violation and justified it by saying they “received this information [that cultivation of GM cotton was banned from the area] when planting was at a very advanced stage.”
Pinesso sent a WhatsApp message saying the interview had been “biased” and that he no longer authorized the publication of the information he had provided
We tried to speak to him again by phone, but he refused to answer our calls. Since the conversation was recorded with Pinesso’s consent and only later did he request that it not be published, we decided to keep his full answer and include his version in this report (listen to full interview here)
Gilson Ferrúcio Pinesso was born in Engenheiro Beltrão
which belonged to his family and went into judicial recovery in 2015
due to debts estimated at 571 million reais at the time
the courts concluded the case of the Pinesso Group
On its official website and LinkedIn profile
cotton and corn in the states of Mato Grosso
Mato Grosso do Sul and Piauí and also started a farming project in Sudan
In addition to being an international producer
Pinesso has been involved in agribusiness organizations
with a strong presence in political and lobbying groups in decision-making spaces
the Brazilian Association of Cotton Producers
and the Mato Grosso Association of Cotton Producers
Pinesso was also the founder and president of the Cooperative of Producers in Brazil’s Cerrado
and one of the organizers and founders of the Mato Grosso Social Cotton Institute
He was also a member and president of the Mixed Agribusiness Cooperative
Pinesso appeared in a long news story on cotton production in Marcelândia
aired on Record TV’s Balanço Geral show in June 2023
In the video
Pinesso praises the start of the operation of a cotton harvesting machine — according to him — for its capacity to “create 70 direct jobs and several indirect ones” in Marcelândia
The story also highlights that it produces more than “300 arrobas” and that “expectations for the 2023 harvest season are high.” Today
300 arrobas is equivalent to 4,406 kg (9,700 lbs)
we asked MAPA if it was aware of genetically modified cotton plantations in Mato Grosso’s exclusion zone
We also asked the ministry what type of sanction applies in such cases and how these biosafety measures are monitored
MAPA had not replied by the time this article was finished
While monitoring of biosafety standards should be improved to avoid circumventions such as those practiced at the Modelo and Nossa Senhora de Nazaré farms in Marcelândia
Genetically modified cotton plantations were fully authorized in Mato Grosso
in a process marked by several conflicts of interest
The removal of the state from the exclusion zone was approved by the National Technical Commission on Biosafety (CTNBio) in a vote held in early May 2024
CTNBio released a note explaining that “in view of the new data
it is clear that gene flow is not an issue for native and naturalized cotton plants
since the flow occurs inside and outside the group
The vote was based on a report produced by Embrapa Cotton indicating there was no risk of contamination of native cotton by modified genes through cross-pollination
which occurs when insects carry pollen from one plant to another
The report states that “the only species found that is different from the cultivated one is Gallini cotton” and that this variety does not favor contamination through pollen transfer from one plant to another, as the document concludes
This variety is used by traditional peoples and communities for handicraft production and medicinal purposes
The research supporting the report involved four field expeditions covering four of the five regions of the state; 47 of Mato Grosso’s 141 municipalities were visited
22 of which were located within the exclusion zone
Gallini (Gossypium barbadense) was found in 453 of the 465 locations visited
Even though genetically modified cotton was present in almost 100% of the sample analyzed
its plantation was authorized throughout the state
experts representing the environmental cause interviewed by Mongabay claim that Embrapa’s data
which formed the basis for the CTNBio decision
a CTNBio member appointed by the Ministry of Environment
states that “a coexistence and exclusion rule must consider all forms of crossbreeding
flower and then it will continue with the crossbreeding process.” Fernandes is the author of the request for examination that suspended the process
contamination occurs not only through pollination by insects but also through seed circulation and exchange
Embrapa Cotton also appears as a petitioner in the process aimed at eliminating exclusion zones in Mato Grosso
This is the first time that the state-owned company
The ministry also asked for the zones to be lifted in Rondônia in 2018
The exclusion zones for genetically modified cotton were created in 2005 to avoid contamination of native and naturalized cotton species
The latter varieties are not originally from Brazil
They arrived here a long time ago and were naturally improved and incorporated into the country’s biomes
Embrapa is the author of the request to lift exclusion zones in Mato Grosso
It also holds 10 patents for genetically modified cotton
with recommendations for use in several parts of Brazil
Two CTNBio members representing Embrapa Cotton who participated in the decision — Marcelo Henrique Aguiar de Freitas and Alexandre Lima Nepomuceno — voted to approve the planting of genetically modified seeds throughout the state
members usually declare a conflict of interest and recuse themselves
with the increase in genetically modified cotton production in Mato Grosso
farmers should demand more seeds from Embrapa Cotton
which benefits the production of the state-owned company
the CNTBio stressed that the possibility of recusal is provided for in Executive Order 5591/2005 and in the commission’s internal regulations
in order to guarantee objectivity in the review process
it also emphasized that “recusal does not apply in cases in which processes at the institution to which [the members in question] belong are not related to activities and projects developed at the CTNBio unit to which they are linked.”
The state of Mato Grosso is Brazil’s largest cotton producer
Much of the cotton that makes the country the second-largest producer in the world
These results are achieved by using biotechnology and pesticides
89% of all cotton grown in Brazil is now genetically modified
according to the latest bulletin from the Céleres consulting group
the authorization for large-scale cotton plantations in the area that used to be an exclusion zone can be seen as opening an expansion frontier for agribusiness into biomes such as the Cerrado and the Amazon
“This biosafety measure has been dismantled to meet economic interests
since Embrapa Cotton’s own research revealed contamination inside and outside the exclusion area,” he says
the process leading to the removal of Mato Grosso from the exclusion zone has the same number as another process that was reviewed in April 2023 and requested the removal of the municipality of Santana do Araguaia
Santana do Araguaia is mistakenly called a microregion when it is actually a municipality in the far south of Pará
A year later, in April 2024, the same process returned to CTNBio’s agenda, at its 270th meeting
but now requesting authorization to plant genetically modified cotton throughout the state of Mato Grosso
asking for its views on the corporation’s several actions in the process of removing Mato Grosso from the exclusion zone
They had not responded by the time this article was finished
We contacted the press office of the Ministry of Science
Technology and Innovation about the status of the process to create the exclusion zone in Mato Grosso
says the first classification presented at its 270th meeting was proposed by the staff of the CTNBio executive secretariat but
“the error was pointed out by the Commission and rectified in the same meeting
with the correction published on the agenda of the 271st Meeting.”
Another point that confuses the defense of society’s economic interests with those of large corporations is the stances taken by researcher Paulo Vianna Barroso
He has taken part in decisions favorable to both the preservation of biodiversity and the expansion of large-scale cotton plantations
Barroso was the president of Embrapa Cotton and played a direct role in the creation of exclusion zones for genetically modified cotton
He is also the author of the document that justified the removal of Tocantins from the exclusion zone
reducing that biosafety area for the first time
According to an article published on Embrapa’s website
he gave a lecture on the cultivation of genetically modified cotton in Roraima
became the second state to be removed from the exclusion zone
In another story, this time published in the magazine Cultivar
he appears as one of the participants in the 4th International Conference on Coexistence between Genetically Modified (GM) and non-GM based Agricultural Supply Chains
The article includes the following statement by Barroso: “In fact
coexistence is an economic discussion whose main function is to establish procedures that guarantee segregation in chains so that adventitious presence of GMOs in conventional products does not exceed the thresholds set by the legislation of each country.”
up to seven such genes were found in a single grain
a researcher and professor of the Department of Plant Science of the graduate studies program in plant genetic resources at the Federal University of Santa Catarina (UFSC)
It is about harmony between farmers who grow genetically modified and native crops and the preservation of genetic heritage,” he says
The research reveals that Brazil has 23 corn breeds as well as hundreds of other varieties
A breed is a set of varieties that are related to each other
is the only one with endemic varieties of corn; that is
“Contamination breaks this adaptation achieved by years of protection and seed storage,” he explains
Barroso has always advocated a minimum distance between genetically modified and native crops
he has adopted the companies’ view as his own
but he has the companies’ discourse,” Nodari says
Researcher Paulo Vianna Barroso was the president of the CTNbio for two terms: 2006-10 and 2019-23. He was a head of the commission during the vote on the request to remove the municipality of Santana do Araguaia from the exclusion zone
Indigenous peoples from Mato Grosso fear that
all of the state’s native cotton will be contaminated by genetically modified species
affecting the production and customs of traditional communities
According to a report produced by Operation Amazônia Nativa (OPAN)
eight Indigenous groups managed native cotton in the state: the Mỹkỹ
Quilombola communities using native seeds were found in the municipalities of Cáceres
the mapping is not complete due to restrictions
since the survey was conducted in the middle of the pandemic
the area involving native seeds may be even larger
is a member of the Yudja Indigenous group and lives in Tuba Tuba village
186 km (116 mi) from the center of Marcelândia
Several generations of his family have cultivated native cotton
which is called makua in his native language
which stands for white cotton in Portuguese
Yabá plants cotton seeds intercropped with cassava in October and harvests them between July and August of the following year
who use feather cotton to make hammocks and belts to support arrow tips
Some of these pieces are sold and generate income for the community
A portion of the seeds is stored in gourds or plastic bottles to be planted the following year
“The seeds are also used by shamans in ‘spear rituals’ to cure the sick
They also serve to alleviate pain and heal wounds,” Yabá explains
He says he does not know if his native cotton has ever been contaminated with modified genes
but he guarantees that the pesticides used on large-scale plantations — cotton
which is contaminated with pesticides thrown on the plantations
redtail catfish — all fish that we eat and appear dead,” he explains
Gabriel Fernandes explains that by authorizing cultivation of GMOs
the CTNBio violates the rights of small farmers
“They want to say that the only cotton crop that counts is monoculture
That is a prejudiced way of referring to these farming families who use cotton in other ways
It means that cotton can disappear because it has no economic importance
it will only be found in the gene bank,” the researcher says
Koparauki is a woman from the Mỹkỹ Indigenous group and grows native white and brown cotton varieties in the Menkü Indigenous Land, in Brasnorte
Brasnorte was considered the 24th-richest agribusiness city in Brazil by the agriculture ministry
Surrounded by a vast expanse of commodity monocultures
Koparauki maintains her native cotton plantation and stores the seeds in bags that are left near the wood-burning stove
“We store the seeds near the fire to preserve them,” she explains
slings used by Indigenous women to carry their babies
says she is already worried about some problems that affect her production of native cotton
She usually plants it between November and December
Pesticides have also been keeping Indigenous Mỹkỹ families up at night
“They [large producers] always planted soybeans and corn
the tractor passes a little too close and the pesticides reach us,” she says
Koparauki says that when she learned about the existence of genetically modified cotton
there’s this modified cotton that could affect us
Banner image: Cultivation of transgenic cotton in Mato Grosso
This story was first published here in Portuguese on Oct
The challenges to developing waterways have focused investor’s attention on railroads
the Amazon Hub of the IIRSA portfolio included eight rail projects
under construction (1) or on the drawing boards (5)
The estimated total budget ranges between $US 20 and $US 30 billion
but even the larger number is an underestimate because it excludes several of Brazil’s most ambitious initiatives
The Brazilian railroad sector is an unusual mixture of private and public corporations
and a concessionaire system where public assets are leased to private companies that commit to large capital investments
the federal government launched an initiative to expand the rail network
particularly new lines that would penetrate the agricultural landscapes of the Southern Amazon and the Amazon-adjacent landscapes of Northeast Brazil
which are collectively referred to as MATOPIBA
Following is a description of the major rail investments underway in the Brazilian Amazon
This is probably the most lucrative railroad in Brazil
it has dramatically lowered the cost of commodity transport from the farms of central and southern Mato Grosso to the port of Santos (São Pualo)
Operated by Brazil’s largest private railroad company (Rumo Logístico)
the line currently reaches Terminal Ferroviário de Rondonópolis
a massive logistical facility with the capacity to transship 12 million tonnes per year
The ninety-year concession for EF-340 stipulates the rail line will be extended to Cuiabá and
Rumo plans to extend Ferrovía Norte to the town of Lucas do Rio Verde (Mato Grosso)
where it will intersect with an East – West railroad under development
This is a new initiative that was not included in the strategic transportation plans formulated in 2011
nor is it included within the IIRSA portfolio
It is a direct response to farmers’ demands for an economically attractive export option from central Mato Grosso
The Ferrogrão will run parallel to BR-163 for 935 kilometres between Sinop (Mato Grosso) and Miritituba (Pará)
Its projected capacity of sixty million tonnes per year approximates the combined soy and maize produced in Mato Grosso in 2019
The $US 1.5 billion investment is being coordinated by a Brazilian engineering firm
Estação da Luz Participações (EDLP) with support from the ABCD commodity traders
The federal government is seeking to fast-track its construction by supporting the environmental review process via the Programa de Parcerias de Investimentos (PPI)
which is managed from the President’s office to facilitate private sector investment in public infrastructure assets
A formal tender process for building and operating a 65-year concession is expected to be convened in 2021
The proposal is unusual in that it would award a monopoly to the concessionaire to operate trains over the railroad
a privilege that would be revoked if the rail line were ever linked to the national rail network
the construction of the Ferrogrão is opposed by environmental advocates and indigenous groups
who maintain that the railroad will promote settlement on the narrow corridor along BR-163 (HML # 17)
The region suffers from an epidemic of illegal activities
particularly land grabbing and unregulated deforestation
phenomena they contend would be supercharged by the influx of thousands of migrant workers for the railroad’s construction
Critics also contend that a reduction in transport costs will increase deforestation across the farm landscapes of northern Mato Grosso
which among other impacts would degrade the water resources of the indigenous territories along the Xingu River
The most conflictive zone is a 75-kilometer stretch through the heart of Parque Nacional Jamanxim
where the BR-163 right-of-way has a width of only 200 meters
Congress approved a measure that would widen the right-of-way of BR-163 through Jamanxim National Park
a precondition for obtaining an environmental license from IBAMA
Construction is planned to start in 2021 and be completed by 2025
but like most infrastructure projects in Brazil
it is not proceeding according to the projected timeline
this rail line will span the country and integrate railroads in the North
the line has been split into three sections: The southern component is operated by Rumo Logístico for 1,500 km between Porto Nacional (Tocantins) and Estrella de Oriente (São Paulo); at its southern terminus
the line connects with the Rumo network that terminates at their massive port facilities at Santos
The central component between Porto Nacional and Açailândia (Maranhão) is operated by Valor da Logística Integrada (VLI)
which also owns the concession for the Estrado Ferro Carajás (EF-315) between the mining complex at the Serra de Carajás and the Port of Itaqui at São Luis de Maranhão
The combination of EF-315 (660 kilometers) and EF-151 (750 kilometers) provides the first fully integrated bulk transport option for farmers from Eastern Mato Grosso
Its capacity was enhanced by the simultaneous construction of fifteen grain-loading platforms located between Anápolis (Goiás) and São Luis de Maranhão
Because it parallels BR-153 through a consolidated frontier (HML #6
its construction has been relatively free of social conflict
Its completion has relieved traffic bottlenecks on the regional highway network
while providing a practical alternative to the long-delayed and conflictive Tocantins waterway
a third section of the Ferrovía Norte Sul will be built between Açailândia and Barcarena
Its construction was postponed because of the expediency of exporting farm commodities via São Luis do Maranhão
but the state government of Pará has embraced its completion as a regional priority
the governor of Pará presented an ambitious plan to expand the nascent rail network to more fully integrate the agricultural landscapes and mineral assets of eastern Pará with an industries park and port facilities at Barcarena
The proposed railway would complete the link between Açailândia and Belem by passing through the oil palm plantations near Tailândia and include spurs to bauxite mines under development at Paragominas and Rondon do Pará
the rail line would cross the Tocantins River
proceed south to El Dorado do Carajás and then up the Araguaía valley to the border with Mato Grosso
Advocates of conventional development support the construction of the railroad because it would generate about 25,000 jobs over the short-term and facilitate the development of a proposed steel mill in Marabá
Agribusiness supports the initiative because it would sway the choice of production models along the highway corridor
Intensive cropping of soy and maize is already the preferred land-use in Northeast Mato Grosso
and the extension of a low-cost grain transport system would accelerate the expansion of industrial agriculture into the municipalities of southeast Pará
Environmental advocates and indigenous groups oppose the initiative because they contend that the Ferrovía Paraense will catalyse another wave of deforestation in the last block of remnant forest between Marabá and Belem
while spurring land grabbing in the indigenous territories on the headwaters of the Rio Xingu
would extend from Port of Vitoria (Espírito Santos) west to near the western border with Peru
The transportation ministry has stratified its development into three phases:
and Peru signed an agreement to evaluate the feasibility of a transcontinental railroad
The route of EF-345 via Acre was one of several projects under evaluation; its proponents contend that it is the most cost-efficient because it would transit the Andes at the Huancabamba Depression
where the maximum elevation is only 2,150 meters above sea level
approximately half the elevational incline that exists in competing proposals
A railroad between Cruzeiro do Sul (HML #28) and Pucallpa (HML #41)would cross two national parks and infringe upon indigenous lands; consequently
there is zero possibility that a multilateral agency would finance the project
which is why the participation of entities from China was viewed with alarm by environmental advocates
The rationale for a transcontinental railroad is based on the assumption that the savings in marine transport would offset the increased cost of rail transport
An independent evaluation by the International Union of Railways showed that the energetic cost of crossing the Andes and the capital cost of a new rail line would make the Ferrovía Transcontinental between fifty and a hundred per cent more expensive when compared to routes through southern Brazil or via the Amazon River
the Brazilian government announced it would support an alternative proposal via Bolivia; known as the Ferroviário Bioceánico Central
this route is both shorter and takes advantage of pre-existing rail lines
functionaries within the infrastructure agencies in both Brazil and Peru inserted a nebulous infrastructure component within the IIRSA portfolio
a term that leaves open the option of building either by road or rail line
The pre-existing rail line that made Bolivia’s transcontinental proposal ‘more attractive’ is a legacy rail system built in the 1950s by Brazil in compensation for the [perceived] loss of territories in the first decades of the twentieth century
This rail line may – or may not – be part of a transcontinental railway
but it has played an essential role in the development of Bolivia’s agroindustry
Bolivia is a land-locked country and the fertile farmland in Santa Cruz (HML #31) is located 2,000 kilometers from the nearest Atlantic port
while Pacific ports are located on the other side of the Andean Cordillera
Although refined products are exported to Peru by truck
it is not economically viable to move bulk grains
the Ferroviaria Oriental connects with ports on the Paraguay – Paraná Waterway
which allows them to compete in global markets
which was built for political rather than economic reasons
the agricultural sector in Bolivia would have grown to only a fraction of its current size
the Instituto Ecuatoriano de Preinversión commissioned a pre-feasibility study to evaluate the viability of an electric-powered rail network
According to descriptions in the general press
most of the track would be built on the Pacific coast with the goal of connecting the country’s banana and oil palm plantations to port facilities
The idea originated during a time when ambitious plans to reduce carbon emissions were popular among government planners
and the concept caught the attention of then-President Rafael Correa
The scheme included a spur that would cross the Andes to service the copper mines under development at the Cordillera del Condor and
would have been built with the financial and technical support of China
The rail line’s demand for electricity would be very large and
influenced plans to increase the construction of hydropower dams in the Amazon
The feasibility study was completed in 2017 and in the same year incorporated into the IIRSA portfolio of investments; however
there is no other evidence the Moreno administration pursued this investment as a priority
“A Perfect Storm in the Amazon” is a book by Timothy Killeen and contains the author’s viewpoints and analysis. The second edition was published by The White Horse in 2021
under the terms of a Creative Commons license (CC BY 4.0 license)
Read the other excerpted portions of chapter 2 here:
Deforestation in Brazil's tropical Cerrado savanna
fell 11 percent to a record low in 2018 compared with a year earlier
the Ministry of Environment said in a statement Tuesday
Deforestation in the South American country's savanna biome totaled 6,657 square kilometers (2,570 square miles)
That's just below 6,777 square kilometers in 2016
the previous low since records began to be kept
A biome is a grouping of plants and animals that have adapted to a specific environment
which has seen a 13.7 percent spike in deforestation this year to a 10-year high
Activists have been concerned that deforestation could spike under policies proposed by President-elect Jair Bolsonaro
1 and has pledged to end the current "industry of fines" for environmental violations like deforestation
The figure for Cerrado is based on the change in deforestation between August 2017 and July 2018
the period used to measure annual destruction
as recorded by Brazilian space research agency Inpe
The statement did not give a reason for the decline in deforestation
The Cerrado's vegetation soaks up major amounts of carbon dioxide
making its preservation key to curbing greenhouse gas emissions and for countering global warming
While the Cerrado is less densely forested than the Amazon rainforest
its plants have deep roots that lock carbon into the ground and are sometimes referred to as an underground forest
Brazil's future environment minister under Bolsonaro
told Reuters on Monday that Bolsonaro would not gut resources for environmental protection
contrary to the fears of environmentalists
Money for environmental protection is spent inefficiently and mismanaged
arguing he could produce better results with the same budget
Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto
One of the world's largest wire services
it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe
Brazil’s railway network spans some 30,000 kilometers
but researchers know little about its impact on wildlife
is that wildlife kills are the most striking issue
So we end up not seeing the impacts associated with them,” says biologist Bibiana Terra Dasoler
a researcher at the Center for Road and Rail Ecology at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (NERF-UFRGS)
This flurry of activity comes despite the current dearth of studies on the impacts of vegetation suppression
the barrier effect — when track structures and deforestation hinder or prevent wildlife movement — as well as noise and soil pollution
figures on wildlife killed by trains in the country are still unknown
a biologist with a master’s degree in analysis and modeling of environmental systems from the Federal University of Minas Gerais
points to the common belief that fewer animals are killed on railways than on roads
the fact that train traffic is lower than car traffic often reinforces that impression
“We used to think that railways’ impact was lower than that of highways, but recent monitoring has found a high number of wildlife casualties,” says Dornas, who focused his master’s research on the number of cane toads (Rhinella marina) killed on a railway line in the Brazilian Amazon
He came up with a figure of 10,000 per year
Dornas worked with data from an unprecedented method for monitoring wildlife on long sections of railway track
Biologist teams walked 871 km of the 892-km (541 out of 554-mi) section of the Carajás railway line in Pará and Maranhão states
They didn’t cover the section of line cutting through Carajás National Forest because of lack of authorization
the researchers could locate small animals that would go unseen from motor vehicles
They scanned the area covering the tracks and a 3-5-meter [10-16-foot] strip on either side of the tracks
Their estimate for dead cane toads was based on the total number of animals found (9,091 carcasses) and the time the carcasses remained on the tracks (38 days on average)
which gave them a figure of 10,233 toads killed per year
But not all the dead toads had been hit by trains
The study also found that some had died from desiccation (loss of water) and barotrauma (sudden change in pressure caused by vehicles passing at high speed)
it’s believed the tracks posed a physical barrier that prevented them from crossing to bodies of water on the other side
and left them exposed to temperatures of up to 51° Celsius (124° Fahrenheit)
“The impact of the barrier effect seems to be the biggest difference between railways and roads,” Dornas says
“there is usually no obstacle for wildlife to cross from one side to the other
are a vertical structure that prevents normal crossing
especially for small animals that can’t jump over them easily.”
reported having a specific program to monitor and assess wildlife along the railway
with measures to reduce hits and other adverse impacts
there are 61 wildlife crossings in specific locations along the railway
which work as mitigation controls and were established based on monitoring carried out over time,” Vale said in a statement
The first two vegetated overpasses for wildlife in Brazil were built on the 101-km (63-mi) branch line that connects one of Vale’s iron ore mines, in Canaã dos Carajás municipality, to the Carajás railway in Parauapebas. In previous reporting
Mongabay highlighted the importance of these structures to maintain connectivity between fragments of preserved vegetation and reduce the barrier effect and thus the number of animals hit by trains
In 2020, rail ecology researcher Dasoler concluded her study on mammals hit by trains on the 750-km (466-mi) north branch line of the Carajás railway
which passes by 79 important protected areas and is used mainly for grain transportation
The study estimated that 4,286 animals weighing 1-260 kilograms (2.2-573 pounds) were killed by trains between January 2015 and November 2016
Dasoler worked with data from Rumo Logística
the company that holds the concession to operate the railway line
she counted the number of dead animals found during foot and vehicle-based monitoring
The vast majority of the animals she found
were yellow armadillos (Euphractus sexcinctus)
there were 217 tapirs (Tapirus terrestris)
45 giant anteaters (Myrmecophaga tridactyla)
the numbers that she and Dornas found in their respective studies indicate that the true number of wildlife hit by trains is quite significant
“Brazil’s road network is much larger than its rail network
so we would think that roads’ impacts are stronger
But we have to measure them proportionally,” she says
construction work has begun on Brazil’s first railway line designed to reduce impacts on wildlife
to the municipalities of Rondonópolis and Lucas do Rio Verde
will run 743 km (462 mi) and pass through 16 municipalities
The project’s innovation lies in its predictive study on wildlife hits
Prist is a researcher and partner-director at ViaFauna Estudos Ambientais
the company commissioned by Rumo Logística to conduct a study to help prevent wildlife hits on the new railway line
a statistical tool that is widely adopted in academia
and which could be useful for the situation,” she says
Predictive analysis studies work with large sets of data to identify patterns that point to future trends
“We used data on wildlife hits collected between 2013 and 2017 from a railway located in the same biome and with similar wildlife and landscape,” Prist says
The same one that Dasoler focused on for her research on mammals hit by trains
The predictive model indicated critical zones for wildlife casualties in general and specifically for tapirs and peccaries (Tayassu pecari)
threatened species that are often hit in the area
In addition to identifying the spots with the highest potential for train hits
ViaFauna’s work recommended the installation of underpasses and overpasses as well as fencing along each of the high-risk sections
the new railway will have 155 wildlife crossings
suspended crossings for arboreal animals and a vegetated overpass — the first of its kind in Mato Grosso state
The company also said it will install 126 km (78 mi) of fencing to funnel wildlife to these crossings
During the construction and operation of the railway
a monitoring system is planned for locating cases of wildlife hits and providing care for injured animals
“We can’t expect models to eliminate hits in the projects that will be built
as this is virtually impossible for several reasons
But if we try and get to prevent the maximum number of hits
Using predictive models to mitigate wildlife hits isn’t a requirement in railway environmental licensing
while some decision-making is still not based on evidence
these procedures have improved in recent years
“This conflict is not very easy to solve because of the licensing process itself
which is complex and subject to political intervention,” he says
wildlife inventories conducted under the environmental impact studies that are a requisite in license applications help to identify the species that occur in a project site
but don’t measure the project’s impact on the wildlife
Reginaldo Cruz, a biologist and technical manager of Cruzeiro do Sul Environmental Consulting
says environmental licensing procedures for these projects remain extremely flawed
assessments do not provide information about the sensitivity and weaknesses of the environments involved and therefore are unnecessary or not applicable,” he says
But despite the doubts about the effectiveness of environmental licensing processes when the focus is wildlife
Cruz says there’s high interest from environmental agencies in advancing studies and improving the process
“It seems to me that we are all citizens who share an interest in improving the country’s logistics infrastructure in the most sustainable way possible
correcting environmental liabilities,” he says
Banner image of a cane toad hit on the Carajás railway line
This story was reported by Mongabay’s Brazil team and first published here on our Brazil site on Aug
Dornas, R. A. (2019). Estimativas e padrões temporais e espaciais de fatalidades de sapos-cururu (Rhinella gr. marina) numa ferrovia da Amazônia brasileira (Estimates and temporal and spatial patterns of toad fatalities (Rhinella gr. marina) on a Brazilian Amazonian railroad (Master’s thesis). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1843/33853
Dasoler, B. T. (2020). Fatalidades de mamíferos em ferrovias: Como estimar quantos morrem e planejar mitigação? (Mammal fatalities on railways: How to estimate how many die and plan mitigation?) (Master’s thesis). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10183/221517
The “fortress conservation” model is under pressure in East Africa, as protected areas become battlegrounds over history, human rights, and global efforts to halt biodiversity loss. Mongabay’s Special Issue goes beyond the region’s world-renowned safaris to examine how rural communities and governments are reckoning with conservation’s colonial origins, and trying to forge a path forward […]
Logout Gateway to the world of smart farming
The Agrishow
the most important fair on agricultural technology in Brazil
took place last week with many novelties on robots
For example, Solinftec announced the first farm 100% manned by robots to protect crops
The Baumgart Group property covers 10,000 hectares in Rio Verde
Solinftec Operations Director for South America
the client had already been testing the latest versions of Solix AG Robotics and chose this revolutionary model for insect and weed management
“The future that people imagined is already present
It is moving towards smaller machines and less application of pesticides
Agricultural robotics is a profound operational change,” he says
10 more sacks of soybeans per hectare in areas of Mato Grosso compared to neighbouring areas with the same input (seeds
fertilizers and pesticides) and climate conditions
That is because Solix is the first technology developed to “live in the field”
using artificial intelligence to monitor and care for each part of the farm plots
which operates through missions and task association with integrated pest management (IPM)
reduced more than 90% of herbicide application in the post-emergence phase or desiccation and pre-planting operations in crops
sugar cane and HF farms in several states like Bahia
another 40 units are in operation in the United States
another 40 units should be operating in Brazilian fields
we should reach 150 to 170 units sold by the end of the year”
The price of Solix Ag Robotics was around R$ 350,000 (64,000 euros) at Agrishow
Grunner presented the prototype of a new multifunctional and autonomous truck for managing grain crops
the model also has an ethanol engine and will be available on the market from 2025
The set brings together Mercedes-Benz trucks and the ADS Smart Machine automation system to reduce trips for loading and unloading
as well as greater efficiency to meet planting and harvesting windows
Driven by the great demand for the model aimed at the sugarcane market
Grunner developed the new set that carries out activities such as soil correction
The ‘transformer’ was voted one of Mercedes-Benz’s 10 best innovations
and can operate autonomously at high speed
contributing to greater productivity and cost reduction
it has a scale with load cells that allows real-time reading of the volume of grains in the bulk and fertilizers and correctives applied
“One of the points that is in our DNA is to offer the market equipment from the field to the field
That is the reason the new ADS Multi was designed to solve challenges in grain crops”
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poultry exporters raked in US$ 956.1 million in the first 2 months of 2021
Photo: Hans PrinsenCompared to the same period last year
Brazilian poultry exports have decreased by 4.7% in volume during the first 2 months of 2021
overseas sales were down from 672,700 tonnes in 2020 to 640,400 tonnes in 2021
According to the Brazilian Association of Animal Protein (ABPA)
11.7% less than in the previous year (US$ 1.082 billion)
These figures include fresh and processed chicken meat
the Brazilian international chicken trade started to recover slightly by 0.1% compared to the same period last year
Sales revenue in the second month of the year totalled US$ 521.7 million
But not all markets are down: “The performance of exports to traditional markets in the Middle East and Europe looks good and indicates a positive pace in international sales in March,” says ABPA president Ricardo Santin
The main highlight of the month were sales to Saudi Arabia
which increased its imports by 19.5% in February
Also noteworthy were exports to South Africa
Canada approved 2 further BRF processing facilities – located in Nova Mutum and Lucas do Rio Verde
both in Mato Grosso state – to export to the internal market in Canada
15 BRF plants have been given the green light to export to Canada
0.82% more than recorded in the same period in 2020
Santa Catarina exported 80,800 tonnes (-8.12%)
Rio Grande do Sul shipped 53,100 tonnes (-0.64%)
Brazil Food wants to boost earnings by up to 150% in 2030 Brazil Food (BRF) expects to increase its earnings by 150% by gaining a market share in big markets as US
According to data from the Secretariat for Agrarian Studies and Policies (Odepa) of Chile
the country started 2021 with a drop in all animal protein production and exports
Poultry production decreased by 10.9% and Chile’s poultry exports also fell quite strongly by 22.5%
Chile’s poultry meat imports increased by 38.3%
Brazil's first corn ethanol project is an international collaboration that will help meet the nation's growing ethanol needs and introduce new feed options to livestock industry
2017 /PRNewswire/ -- There is a significant new player in the Brazilian biofuels industry
A grand opening was held this past week signaling the start of operations at FS Bioenergia
a world-class $115 million corn-only ethanol production facility located in Lucas do Rio Verde
Mato Grosso. FS Bioenergia is the first large-scale corn ethanol production plant in Brazil and is the result of an international collaboration between Brazilian agribusiness Fiagril and U.S.-based Summit Agricultural Group headquartered in Alden
FS Bioenergia will annually process 22 million bushels of corn and produce more than 60 million gallons of corn ethanol
6,200 tons of corn oil and 170,000 tons of valuable feed rations for Brazil's growing livestock industry
FS Bioenergia's second phase of operations will increase corn processing and ethanol production two-fold
"FS Bioenergia is the most modern and efficient ethanol production operation in the world and will revolutionize the biofuels landscape in Brazil," said Bruce Rastetter
founder and CEO of Summit Agricultural Group
"Summit Ag Group and Fiagril are proud to have delivered this historic project to Mato Grosso
and we look forward to the development of the region as a leader in ethanol
FS Bioenergia's corn ethanol operation is considered a landmark project in Brazil that will deliver immediate value to the country
the plant will offset the country's increasing demand for domestic ethanol
which can't be met by the existing sugarcane ethanol production
the facility will introduce to Mato Grosso valuable fiber and protein co-products known as dried distillers' grains (DDGs)
which will serve as high-value feed for the expanding Brazilian livestock industry.
"This is a transformative moment for both agriculture and the renewable fuels industry in Brazil
"FS Bioenergia will not only meet Brazil's growing demand for ethanol but it sets the stage for Mato Grosso to become a global leader in the production of corn ethanol."
Brazil began sugar cane ethanol production in the mid-1970s and today produces approximately 25 percent of the world's ethanol
Bank of America estimated that annual ethanol sales in Brazil could reach 13.5 billion U.S
two-thirds greater than the 8.1 billion gallons estimated in sugar cane ethanol production in 2016
The Mato Grosso region's substantial corn production – both proven and potential – make corn-derived ethanol the most viable option to complement existing sugar cane ethanol production and fulfill an annual multi-billion gallon shortfall.
Summit Agricultural Group and Fiagril broke ground on the corn-only ethanol production facility in early 2016
FS Bioenergia will employ roughly 150 full-time workers
In addition to ethanol and co-products for livestock feed
the ethanol facility will generate 60,000 megawatts of electricity to the local power grid
FS Bioenergia utilized process technologies from ICM
construction and operational services for more than 100 ethanol plants in North America
Founded in 1990 by entrepreneur and agribusiness pioneer Bruce Rastetter, Summit Agricultural Group is a diverse farming, agricultural investment and farm management company headquartered in Alden, Iowa. Summit's diverse operations include successful row crop, beef cattle and pork farms in the U.S. and a growing presence in the South American biofuels market. For additional information, go to www.SummitAg.com
Al Setka 515.226.0818 (office)515.720.7763 (mobile)[email protected]
http://www.summitag.com
Al Setka 515.226.0818 (office)515.720.7763 (mobile)asetka@thinkwixted.com
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$100 million investment in world's most modern and efficient corn ethanol facility will more than double production to 140 million gallons by early 2019
2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Summit Agricultural Group announced today a $100 million expansion of FS Bioenergia
the leading corn ethanol production facility in Brazil
The expansion of the FS Bioenergia plant in Lucas do Rio Verde
is forecasted for completion in the first quarter of 2019 and will more than double annual corn ethanol production from 60 million gallons to 140 million gallons
FS Bioenergia will annually process over 50 million bushels of corn and produce more than 14,000 tons of corn oil and 400,000 tons of valuable feed rations for Brazil's growing livestock industry
"This is a significant step for FS Bioenergia
but it's even more important for the growth of corn ethanol production in Brazil," said Bruce Rastetter
"When we began this project several years ago
we were confident of the opportunities in Brazilian renewables
we're more convinced than ever of the potential for corn ethanol in Mato Grosso."
Driving that optimism are two factors – first
increased production of affordable corn through double cropping
corn production over the last decade has increased five-fold
which is legislation that would double Brazil's renewable fuels use by 2030
"Brazil's long-standing commitment to renewable fuels coupled with an abundance of affordable feedstocks make for an attractive corn ethanol picture in Brazil," said Justin Kirchhoff managing director and head of private equity for Summit Agricultural Group
''As we look at the expansion of FS Bioenergia over this next year
we're in a strong position to benefit from these favorable conditions."
Recognized today as the most modern and efficient corn ethanol production operation in the world
FS Bioenergia is a collaboration between a Mato Grosso agribusiness and U.S.-based Summit Agricultural Group
a leader in international agribusiness development
renewable energy and production agriculture headquartered in Alden
Summit and its Brazilian partner broke ground on the corn-only ethanol production facility in early 2016
with the initial phase of production starting in mid-2017
As with the plant's original design and development
the FS Bioenergia expansion will utilize process technologies from ICM
By utilizing the most modern process technology FS Bioenergia is able to produce differentiated high-value co-products such as high-protein and high-fiber dried distillers' grains (DDG's) that are targeted towards specific livestock markets
This process technology also improves overall plant yield and efficiency
FS Bioenergia's corn ethanol operation is considered a landmark project in Brazil that is already delivering immediate value to the country
which can't be met by existing sugarcane ethanol production
The facility will also introduce to Mato Grosso valuable fiber and protein co-products known as dried distillers' grains (DDGs)
Summit Agricultural Group is a diverse farming, agricultural investment and farm management company headquartered in Alden, Iowa. Summit's diverse operations include successful row crop production, beef cattle and pork farms in the U.S. and a growing presence in the South American biofuels market. For additional information, go to www.SummitAg.com
contact:
Al Setka 515.226.0818 (office) 515.720.7763 (mobile) [email protected]
http://www.SummitAg.com
Al Setka 515.226.0818 (office) 515.720.7763 (mobile) asetka@thinkwixted.com
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Brazil trains carrying soybeans are seen near the port of Paranagua in the southeastern Brazilian city of Curitiba in this file photo taken in March 2011
Brazil is in the process of preparing to find investors for a $2.4 billion railway project that will link the center and western portions of the country and serve as a major route for grain transportation
Some initial interest in the railroad project has come from investors in China
including the China Railway Construction Corp (CRCC) and the China Railway Engineering Corp (CREC)
an online Latin American business publication
Agência Brasil said the new line would be the first railway concession offered under Brazil's national logistics investment program
said sourcing foreign investment for the project is a topic of utmost priority
"We clearly need to attract investments from the private sector," Passos said in an Aug 22 interview with BNAmericas
Brazilian officials have long expressed their wish to see Chinese rail companies get more involved in the nation's infrastructure program
highlighting the competitiveness and experience of China
home to one of the world's largest rail networks
China and Brazil signed a long-awaited memorandum of understanding (MOU) on railway construction
"China has a strong interest in Brazilian commodities
so they want to invest in railroads in Brazil to reduce transport costs
because the Brazilian government wants to attract investments in infrastructure," Charles Tang
chairman of the Brazil-China Chamber of Commerce based in Sao Paulo
said in a July interview with The Wall Street Journal
Production for this Centro-Oeste project is set to be split into two phases
Phase one entails building an 833-kilometer stretch from Campinorte in the state of Goias
before connecting to a major north-south line
From there the Centro-Oeste line will run westward to Lucas do Rio Verde city in Mato Grosso state
Phase two includes a 600-km extension from Lucas do Rio Verde to Vilhena
CRCC and CREC could not be contacted for comment
calls for the construction of more than 11,000 km in railways throughout Brazil
And the Centro-Oeste railroad project is part of a larger plan to build the Ferrovia Transcontinental railroad
which falls under Brazil's state-run growth acceleration program
The Ferrovia railroad will run more than 4,400 km from the northeastern state of Acre to the southeastern state Rio de Janeiro
China became "the No 1 buyer of Brazilian exports" in the beginning of 2010
according to a publication by The Brookings Institution
a Washington-based nonprofit public policy organization
Brazilian exports to China increased to more than $21 billion in 2009 from $1.1 billion in 2000
while imports from China also rose to $15.9 billion from $1.2 billion over the same period
Brazil's Trade and Development Minister Mauro Borges told the Journal that Brazil and China are looking to change the way the two countries interact economically
Trade between China and Brazil soared to $83.3 billion last year from $3.2 billion in 2002
soy and oil making up the bulk of Brazilian exports