By Eliza Mackintoch, CNN, August 23, 2019
hile the wildfires raging in the Amazon rainforest may constitute an "international crisis," they are hardly an accident.
hile the wildfires raging in the Amazon rainforest may constitute an "international crisis," they are hardly an accident.
The vast majority of the fires have been set by loggers and ranchers to
clear land for cattle. The practice is on the rise, encouraged by Jair
Bolsonaro, Brazil's populist pro-business president, who is backed by
the country's so-called "beef caucus."
While this may be business as usual for Brazil's beef farmers, the rest of the world is looking on in horror.
So,
for those wondering how they could help save the rainforest, known as
"the planet's lungs" for producing about 20% of the world's oxygen, the
answer may be simple. Eat less meat.
It's
an idea that Finland has already floated. On Friday, the Nordic
country's finance minister called for the European Union to "urgently
review the possibility of banning Brazilian beef imports" over the
Amazon fires.
Brazil is the world's largest exporter of beef, providing close to 20% of the total global exports, according the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) -- a figure that could rise in the coming years.
Last
year the country shipped 1.64 million tonnes of beef -- the highest
volume in history -- generating $6.57 billion in revenue, according to
the Brazilian Beef Exporters Association (Abiec), an association of more than 30 Brazilian meat-packing companies.
The
growth of Brazil's beef industry has been driven in part by strong
demand from Asia -- mostly China and Hong Kong. These two markets alone
accounted for nearly 44% of all beef exports from Brazil in 2018, according to the USDA.
And a trade deal struck in June
between South America's Mercosur bloc of countries and the European
Union could open up even more markets for Brazil's beef-packing
industry.
Speaking after the
agreement as announced, the head of Abiec, Antônio Camardelli, said the
pact could help Brazil gain access to prospective new markets, like
Indonesia and Thailand, while boosting sales with existing partners,
like the EU. "A deal of this magnitude is like an invitation card for
speaking with other countries and trade blocs," Camardelli told Reuters in July.
Once implemented, the deal will lift a 20% levy on beef imports into the EU.
But, on Friday, Ireland said it was ready to block the deal unless Brazil took action on the Amazon.
In
a statement Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar described as "Orewellian"
Bolsonaro's attempt to blame the fires on environmental groups.
Varadkar said that Ireland will monitor Brazil's environmental actions
to determine whether to block the Mercosur deal, which is two years
away.
He added Irish and European
farmers could not be told to use fewer pesticides and respect
biodiversity when trade deals were being made with countries not
subjected to "decent environmental, labor and product standards."
In
June, before the furor over the rainforest began, the Irish Farmers
Association called on Ireland not to ratify the deal, arguing its terms
would disadvantage European beef farmers.
Deal
or no deal, Brazil's beef industry is projected to continue expanding,
buoyed by natural resources, grassland availability and global demand,
according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
And, with that growth, comes steep environmental costs.
Brazil's
space research center (INPE) said this week that the number of fires in
Brazil is 80% higher than last year. More than half are in the Amazon
region, spelling disaster for the local environment and ecology.
Alberto
Setzer, a senior scientist at INPE, told CNN that the burning can range
from a small-scale agricultural practice, to new deforestation for
mechanized and modern agribusiness projects.
Farmers
wait until the dry season to start burning and clearing areas so their
cattle can graze, but this year's destruction has been described as
unprecedented. Environmental campaigners blame this uptick on Bolsonaro,
who they say has encouraged ranchers, farmers, and loggers to exploit
and burn the rainforest like never before with a sense of impunity.
Bolsonaro has dismissed accusations of responsibility for the fires, but a clear shift seems to be underway.
And if saving the rainforest isn't enough to convince carnivores to stop eating Brazilian beef -- the greenhouse gas emissions the cattle create may be.
Beef is responsible for 41% of livestock greenhouse gas emissions, and that livestock accounts for 14.5%
of total global emissions. And methane -- the greenhouse gas cattle
produce from both ends -- is 25 times more potent that carbon dioxide.
An alarming report released last year by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
report, said changing our diets could contribute 20% of the effort
needed to keep global temperatures from rising 2°C above pre-industrial
levels. Namely, eating less meat.
Still,
global consumption of beef and veal is set to rise in the next decade
according to projections from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD) and the Food and Agricultural Organization of
the United Nations (FAO).
A joint report predicted global production would increase 16% between 2017 and 2027 to meet demand.
The majority of that expansion will be in developing countries, like Brazil.
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