One major Brazilian supermarket chain has just
committed stop selling beef linked to Amazon destruction and human
rights violations – because Brazilians demanded it.
Today Grupo Pão de Açúcar – one of Brazil’s major
supermarket chains and owned by Casino supermarkets in Europe –
announced huge changes to the way it buys and sells beef. After years of
claiming ignorance about its supply chain, it is now taking action to
keep beef linked to deforestation and labour abuse from its shelves.
This is a big deal for Brazil and the planet. Here's why:
1. Stopping deforestation for beef is crucial for the Amazon and the climate.
The cattle sector in the Brazilian Amazon is the largest driver of deforestation
in the world, responsible for one in every eight hectares destroyed
globally. After rainforest is burned or clear-cut for timber, ranchers quickly move cattle into the newly deforested areas
to feed on the fast-growing grass. There are already more cows than
people in Brazil, and millions of those cows are in the Amazon region –
occupying about 60 percent of all deforested land.
The impacts of cattle in the Amazon aren’t limited to Brazil’s borders. The Amazon rainforest stores huge amounts of carbon,
helping to keep Earth’s climate in balance. Deforestation destroys the
forest buffer we rely on, impacting the climate for all of us.
Up until last year when Greenpeace Brazil exposed
the practices of Brazilian supermarkets, the companies were selling
beef linked to this destruction with little consequence to them. Now, as
Pão de Açúcar commits to transparency and strong policies to guide its
beef purchasing, the supermarket is sending a clear signal to all its
suppliers that beef connected to deforestation is no longer acceptable.
2. Amazon beef and labour abuse are connected. Addressing deforestation means addressing workers’ rights, too.
Livestock production in the Brazilian Amazon isn’t
just the leading cause of deforestation there. It also has historically
relied on slave labour and is often connected to the invasion of
Indigenous Lands.
To address this, Grupo Pão de Açúcar’s has proposed a
100 percent transparency program for the beef sold in its stores that
would block meat from farms involved in slave labour and clashes with
traditional communities, in addition to deforestation.
3. Pão de Açúcar’s change of heart shows that consumer voices make a difference.
When thousands of customers of Pão de Açúcar made it
known they wanted an end to beef linked to deforestation, labour abuse
and invasion of Indigenous Lands, the company listened.
Consumers have the right to know if they are
contributing to the destruction of the Amazon or the violation of human
rights. The question now is how long it will take other supermarkets in
Brazil to start listening, too.
What’s next?
Much remains to be done to ensure that meat across
Brazil is not connected to deforestation, slave labour and illegal
occupation of land. And people in Brazil and around the world need to eat less meat to ensure a stable climate, reduce pollution and improve health. But
from supermarket aisles to the halls of Brazil’s National Congress,
Brazilians are showing that real change for forests is possible. Just
last year, more than 1.4 million Brazilians pledged their support for a law that would make Amazon deforestation of any kind illegal!
Greenpeace will continue monitoring Pão de Açúcar to
ensure the company keeps its promises. Now, we need to push the rest of
industry in the same direction.
Adriana Charoux is an Amazon campaigner at Greenpeace Brazil.
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