Greenwashed and growing
Many are capitalising on a loophole in the Amazon Soy Moratorium, a voluntary pact signed in 2006 by the world's top grain traders, pledging not to buy soy grown on land deforested after 2008.
The moratorium protects old-growth rainforest, but excludes secondary forests – vegetation that regrew after land was previously cleared.
Though crucial to the Amazon's health, these areas can be legally razed and planted with soy, all without violating the deal's terms. The resulting crops can even be marketed as 'deforestation-free'.
The most recent moratorium report, covering the 2022–2023 season, showed soy planted on virgin forest had nearly tripled since 2018 to reach 250,000ha – 3.4% of all soy grown in the Amazon.
But the actual figure may be much higher.
Xiaopeng Song, a University of Maryland geographer who has tracked soy expansion, found more than 1.04 million hectares – or 16% of soy-planted land in the Brazilian Amazon – had been deforested since 2008. His satellite data suggest four times the forest loss reported.
'I would like to see secondary forest and recovered forest included in the moratorium,' Song said. 'It creates loopholes if we only limit it to primary forest.'
Abiove, the soy industry body overseeing the agreement, said the moratorium was designed to curb destruction of old-growth forests.
Broader definitions used by other studies could lead to 'inflated interpretations', it added.
The report's figures are based on data from Brazil's National Institute for Space Research, which is internationally recognised and independently monitored.
Abiove admitted some soy is planted on land where regrown forests had been cleared – but has defended the current framework.
A chain, normally used connected to tractors to fell down trees at the last stages of clearing land, lying in a field. — Reuters
Shrinking buffer
The distinction between primary and secondary forests carries serious consequences. Secondary forests may be younger and initially less biodiverse, but they play a critical role in absorbing carbon and restoring damaged ecosystems.
'Secondary forests are crucial to limiting global warming,' said Viola Heinrich, a researcher at the GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences. 'We cannot achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement without actively increasing the carbon sink.'
While they store less carbon than primary forests, secondary forests absorb it faster, making them vital in slowing the Amazon's drift towards a tipping point – when deforestation, heat and drought could trigger its irreversible transformation into a dry savannah.
Most scientists now argue that stopping deforestation alone isn't enough; reforestation is essential.
'Stolen again'
Late last year, under blistering heat on the edge of Santarem, a port city on the Amazon River, farmers were clearing land – stacking tree trunks in neat rows, ready to burn.
Satellite images showed this was once cattle pasture that had regrown into secondary forest over three decades.
'What can be stolen once can be stolen again,' said Gilson Rego, of the Pastoral Land Commission, a church-linked group that works with locals impacted by deforestation.
He pointed to nearby soy fields that had been planted in the past five years.
The area's rapid transformation is largely due to the Cargill grain terminal, which offers easy export access – cutting logistics costs and fuelling the soy boom. Cargill did not respond to requests for comment.
The surge helped Brazil overtake the United States in 2020 as the world's top soy exporter.
About two-thirds of Brazil's soy goes to China, where major buyer Cofco, a signatory to the moratorium, claims it remains committed to the deal.
Nearly all the soy is used as animal feed for global meat production.
Still, Song estimates that without the moratorium and related conservation efforts, an additional six million hectares of forest might have been lost to soy in Brazil.
By comparison, neighbouring Bolivia, which lacks such controls, has become a deforestation hotspot.
A rural cemetery surrounded by a soy field where soybean farming expanded in the Amazon. — Reuters
Pressure to backslide
Brazilian farmers have long opposed the moratorium, arguing it unfairly penalises them.
Even minor infractions can lead traders to block purchases from entire farms – a policy Abiove is considering relaxing.
Roughly 10% of Amazon soy farmland is currently blacklisted.
'It's not fair that countries in Europe can deforest to grow, and now we're held back by laws that aren't even ours,' said Adelino Avelino Noimann, vice-president of the soy farmers' association in Para state, which includes Santarem.
Farming groups allied with right-wing politicians have ramped up legal and legislative attacks on the moratorium in Brasilia and across several agricultural states, seeking to dilute its protections.
In April, a Supreme Court justice said Brazil's largest soy-growing state, Mato Grosso, could withdraw tax breaks from companies that honour the moratorium – a move yet to be confirmed by the full court.
Abiove president Andre Nassar told senators that the agreement's rules might need to be watered down to placate growers: 'The solution is not ending the moratorium or keeping it as it is. Something needs to be done.'
Global traders – including ADM, Bunge, Cargill, Cofco and Louis Dreyfus Company – have remained tight-lipped.
But Greenpeace, which takes part in some discussions, said there's pressure behind the scenes to weaken the deal.
Even so, environmentalists say the moratorium remains vital.
'We still see the expansion of soy in the Amazon,' said Andre Guimaraes, executive director of IPAM, an environmental research group. 'But it could be worse.'
Soy vs schools
The rich soil and ample water of the Amazon have drawn farmers from across Brazil, particularly from Mato Grosso, the soy heartland.
'Here, we can have as many as three harvests,' said Edno Valmor Cortezia, head of the local farmers' union – rotating soy, maize and wheat on the same plot in a single year.
In Belterra, near Santarem, soy fields have crept up to a school and even a cemetery.
Raimundo Edilberto Sousa Freitas, the school principal, showed court records from two pesticide incidents last year that affected 80 students and teachers.
One farmer was fined, but soy continues to sprawl through the area.
Occasionally, a few lone trees – protected by law – stand in vast expanses of soy, the last hints of the vibrant biome that once covered the region. — Reuters
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The Star
3 days ago
- The Star
Greenwashed and growing
BRAZILIAN soy farmers are pushing deeper into the Amazon rainforest, threatening a landmark deal meant to slow deforestation. Many are capitalising on a loophole in the Amazon Soy Moratorium, a voluntary pact signed in 2006 by the world's top grain traders, pledging not to buy soy grown on land deforested after 2008. The moratorium protects old-growth rainforest, but excludes secondary forests – vegetation that regrew after land was previously cleared. Though crucial to the Amazon's health, these areas can be legally razed and planted with soy, all without violating the deal's terms. The resulting crops can even be marketed as 'deforestation-free'. The most recent moratorium report, covering the 2022–2023 season, showed soy planted on virgin forest had nearly tripled since 2018 to reach 250,000ha – 3.4% of all soy grown in the Amazon. But the actual figure may be much higher. Xiaopeng Song, a University of Maryland geographer who has tracked soy expansion, found more than 1.04 million hectares – or 16% of soy-planted land in the Brazilian Amazon – had been deforested since 2008. His satellite data suggest four times the forest loss reported. 'I would like to see secondary forest and recovered forest included in the moratorium,' Song said. 'It creates loopholes if we only limit it to primary forest.' Abiove, the soy industry body overseeing the agreement, said the moratorium was designed to curb destruction of old-growth forests. Broader definitions used by other studies could lead to 'inflated interpretations', it added. The report's figures are based on data from Brazil's National Institute for Space Research, which is internationally recognised and independently monitored. Abiove admitted some soy is planted on land where regrown forests had been cleared – but has defended the current framework. A chain, normally used connected to tractors to fell down trees at the last stages of clearing land, lying in a field. — Reuters Shrinking buffer The distinction between primary and secondary forests carries serious consequences. Secondary forests may be younger and initially less biodiverse, but they play a critical role in absorbing carbon and restoring damaged ecosystems. 'Secondary forests are crucial to limiting global warming,' said Viola Heinrich, a researcher at the GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences. 'We cannot achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement without actively increasing the carbon sink.' While they store less carbon than primary forests, secondary forests absorb it faster, making them vital in slowing the Amazon's drift towards a tipping point – when deforestation, heat and drought could trigger its irreversible transformation into a dry savannah. Most scientists now argue that stopping deforestation alone isn't enough; reforestation is essential. 'Stolen again' Late last year, under blistering heat on the edge of Santarem, a port city on the Amazon River, farmers were clearing land – stacking tree trunks in neat rows, ready to burn. Satellite images showed this was once cattle pasture that had regrown into secondary forest over three decades. 'What can be stolen once can be stolen again,' said Gilson Rego, of the Pastoral Land Commission, a church-linked group that works with locals impacted by deforestation. He pointed to nearby soy fields that had been planted in the past five years. The area's rapid transformation is largely due to the Cargill grain terminal, which offers easy export access – cutting logistics costs and fuelling the soy boom. Cargill did not respond to requests for comment. The surge helped Brazil overtake the United States in 2020 as the world's top soy exporter. About two-thirds of Brazil's soy goes to China, where major buyer Cofco, a signatory to the moratorium, claims it remains committed to the deal. Nearly all the soy is used as animal feed for global meat production. Still, Song estimates that without the moratorium and related conservation efforts, an additional six million hectares of forest might have been lost to soy in Brazil. By comparison, neighbouring Bolivia, which lacks such controls, has become a deforestation hotspot. A rural cemetery surrounded by a soy field where soybean farming expanded in the Amazon. — Reuters Pressure to backslide Brazilian farmers have long opposed the moratorium, arguing it unfairly penalises them. Even minor infractions can lead traders to block purchases from entire farms – a policy Abiove is considering relaxing. Roughly 10% of Amazon soy farmland is currently blacklisted. 'It's not fair that countries in Europe can deforest to grow, and now we're held back by laws that aren't even ours,' said Adelino Avelino Noimann, vice-president of the soy farmers' association in Para state, which includes Santarem. Farming groups allied with right-wing politicians have ramped up legal and legislative attacks on the moratorium in Brasilia and across several agricultural states, seeking to dilute its protections. In April, a Supreme Court justice said Brazil's largest soy-growing state, Mato Grosso, could withdraw tax breaks from companies that honour the moratorium – a move yet to be confirmed by the full court. Abiove president Andre Nassar told senators that the agreement's rules might need to be watered down to placate growers: 'The solution is not ending the moratorium or keeping it as it is. Something needs to be done.' Global traders – including ADM, Bunge, Cargill, Cofco and Louis Dreyfus Company – have remained tight-lipped. But Greenpeace, which takes part in some discussions, said there's pressure behind the scenes to weaken the deal. Even so, environmentalists say the moratorium remains vital. 'We still see the expansion of soy in the Amazon,' said Andre Guimaraes, executive director of IPAM, an environmental research group. 'But it could be worse.' Soy vs schools The rich soil and ample water of the Amazon have drawn farmers from across Brazil, particularly from Mato Grosso, the soy heartland. 'Here, we can have as many as three harvests,' said Edno Valmor Cortezia, head of the local farmers' union – rotating soy, maize and wheat on the same plot in a single year. In Belterra, near Santarem, soy fields have crept up to a school and even a cemetery. Raimundo Edilberto Sousa Freitas, the school principal, showed court records from two pesticide incidents last year that affected 80 students and teachers. One farmer was fined, but soy continues to sprawl through the area. Occasionally, a few lone trees – protected by law – stand in vast expanses of soy, the last hints of the vibrant biome that once covered the region. — Reuters


The Star
08-07-2025
- The Star
China's Li, Brazil's Lula pledge joint effort to bring AI to farming
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Chinese Premier Li Qiang agreed to cooperate on bringing artificial intelligence to improve agriculture in both of their countries, and Lula called on his counterpart to join an initiative aimed at saving the world's forests. In a statement issued from the sidelines of the annual Brics summit in Rio de Janeiro, the two sides also highlighted the 'excellent moment in bilateral relations' and reaffirmed their 'commitment to multilateralism and peace, underlining the role of BRICS in defending multilateral trade and climate regimes'. Plans for the centre, whose focus will be on farming in semi-arid regions, were initially agreed to in Brasília during a meeting last month between Luciana Santos, Brazil's minister of science, technology and innovation, and Lin Xin, China's vice-minister of science and technology and secretary for technological development. 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The two sides will also set up a working group tasked with identifying what kinds of technology exchange would support industrial innovation in both countries, and where they could establish more research centres to support the effort. The announcement comes against a backdrop of trade tensions that Beijing is trying to work out with US President Donald Trump, who is holding American tech export restrictions as leverage in his effort to secure greater access to critical minerals for American firms. Last month, both nations said they reached a consensus on the issue, and the US eased limits on some chip design software exports to China. China remains heavily reliant on US technology in hi-tech sectors such as smartphones, semiconductors, software, pharmaceuticals, engines, AI, drones, cloud computing, and autonomous vehicles. Since 2022, Washington has tightened limits on the export of advanced technologies, especially semiconductors needed for AI training, in an effort to curb China's progress in developing military capabilities considered to be a threat to US national security. Chinese firms have been added to the US Entity Lists, restricting their access to high-performance chips from American companies, including Nvidia and AMD. The US has also pressured allies, including the Netherlands and Japan, to block exports of advanced chipmaking tools, notably from the Dutch firm ASML. In response, China has accelerated its push for tech self-reliance. Firms like Huawei and SMIC have registered some success, with Huawei developing its own chips and software, and SMIC producing 7-nanometre chips. However, challenges remain on attracting skilled talent and scaling up production. To overcome these hurdles, China has deepened tech ties with Russia, Malaysia and some other countries. In addition to AI cooperation, Lula and Li Qiang also pledged to expand collaboration on semiconductors and renewable energy, and to strengthen ties between shipyards in both countries. No further details were revealed on these efforts. China is the world's leading shipbuilder, accounting for 50% of global production and launching around 1,700 new vessels each year. The meeting also touched on other points of cooperation, including the development of geostationary satellites and the deepening of the memorandum on 'synergies' between national development programmes. The goal is to build on agreements signed during Xi Jinping's state visit to Brasília in November, when the two leaders pledged to identify projects from Brazil's Growth Acceleration Program, one of Lula's main campaign promises, that could be financed by China's Belt and Road Initiative. The framework was the solution found by Brazilian diplomats to cooperate with the BRI without joining the Chinese trade and infrastructure initiative as Beijing wanted. The leaders concluded their meeting with a request from Lula for China to join the Tropical Forests Forever Fund (TFFF) at COP30, which Brazil is also hosting in November. The Brasília-led initiative aims to mobilise around US$4bil (RM16.95bil) per year to be distributed proportionally to countries that preserve their forests by keeping deforestation below a defined threshold. – South China Morning Post


The Star
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- The Star
Indonesian National Park introduces tracking bracelets for hiker safety; new measures after recent tragedy
JAKARTA (Bernama-Xinhua): Climbers at Bromo Tengger Semeru National Park in Indonesia are required to wear tracking bracelets to enhance safety. The bracelets, known as radio frequency identification (RFID) devices, contain a mini chip and antenna that transmit signals to receiver towers located at several points along the hiking trail, said Endrip Wahyutama, public relations officer of the park, based in Malang Regency, East Java province, on Monday. Mount Semeru, situated in Indonesia's East Java province, is one of the country's active volcanoes. According to the spokesperson, the use of the bracelets began in June. "With this bracelet, we can track the climbers' positions. Climbing in the Semeru area still involves risks such as getting lost, falling, or even disappearing entirely," Wahyutama said. The initiative follows a recent incident in which Brazilian climber Juliana Marins died after falling into a 600-meter-deep ravine on Mount Rinjani in West Nusa Tenggara province on June 21. Indonesia is home to 127 active volcanoes, including Mount Semeru. - Bernama-Xinhua