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We Saw Brazil's Future and It's Not Green But Grey PDF Print E-mail
2005 - March 2005
Written by Amanda Smallwood   
Tuesday, 15 March 2005 19:48

Brazil's Amazon9,000 square miles of Amazonian rainforest were destroyed in 2004, an urgent call to the Brazilian government to implement firm policies on the preservation of the country’s natural resources.

The February slaying of U.S.–born nun and environmental activist, Dorothy Stang, peaked international awareness of the ongoing violence in Brazil over environmental and agrarian reforms.

The recent legalization of genetically modified soybeans once more confirms that the economic benefits of Brazil’s agribusiness sector have perpetually swayed Lula away from enacting stricter environmental policies.

In pursuit of a stronger economy and higher standard of living for Brazilians, Lula’s left-of-center administration is following a narrowly focused path of development to the detriment of the country’s ecosystems; critics argue that the various infrastructure and energy-based programs given priority are in no way conducive to a truly sustainable system.

The Challenge

On February 12, 2005, a U.S.-born environmental and human rights activist was shot dead in the northern Amazonian rainforest. Working in the notoriously volatile state of Pará, 74-year-old Dorothy Stang, like many before her, was targeted because of her activism against the rampant lawlessness in the Amazon where illegal ranchers and loggers poach on the fragile rainforest.

The news of her death was yet another reminder of the constant violence rising out of the ongoing dilemma in Brazil posed by unsustainable development projects.

The suffering of a country’s poverty-stricken cannot be minimized or trivialized. Therefore, Lula’s critics argue that steps must be taken to effectively deal with such socio-economic realities.

The necessary goal of poverty alleviation combined with Brazil’s increasing demand for energy together give some plausibility to the current policies favoring unrestricted development.

However, such a prioritization places a heavy political weight on Lula, who repeatedly has voiced concern for the state of Brazil’s natural habitat, even while he is not doing much about it.

Nevertheless, the president’s priorities have seemingly adapted to the demands of the economy, much to the dismay of environmentalists worldwide who have expressed their utter incredulity that the anti-environmental option that Lula is now exercising can produce a truly sustainable system.

He gave evidence of the retreat when, referring to the Amazon in a televised speech, Lula said that “it can't be treated like it was something from another world, untouchable, in which the people don't have the right to the benefits.”

The term “untouchable” rings hollow when applied to the Amazon, where rampant deforestation, slash and burn agriculture, and an array of other despoliations have taken heavy tolls on the ecosystem.

Five hundred years ago, the Atlantic rainforest covered the majority of Brazil’s 8,500-kilometer coastline, yet today less than seven percent remains.

The preponderance of destruction to the Amazon, home to fifty percent of the world’s biodiversity, has taken place in the last fifty years, an acceleration that greatly concerns environmentalists who initially expressed excitement over the eco-conscious president but are now cooling off their enthusiasm, even feeling betrayed.

Lula’s Environmental Game Plan

Taking action in 2003 to address the issue at hand, Lula appointed Marina Silva, highly regarded at the time, as Brazil’s Minister of State for the Environment.

In May of that year, Minister Silva attended a conference, co-hosted by Washington’s Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, where she outlined the new administration’s plans for a more integrated approach to environmental issues.

President Lula “does not want a ministerial environmental policy… but rather a governmental environmental policy,” she said. The basis for Brazil’s environmental agenda, Silva continued, consists of “the brown, the blue, and the green.”

These colors refer to three major programs: the processing and disposal of solid waste while accounting for its environmental impact, the recovery of rivers and riparian buffers (e.g. damaged stream banks) while addressing air pollution, and the development of agriculture while respecting forest conservation.

Following these guidelines, the environmental ministry ostensibly sought to strengthen the articulation and coordination of all ecological policies undertaken by both federal and state agencies while assuring that their scope reflects the country’s priority for economic development.

The minister maintained that the new administration “wants a model in which sustainable development will promote the social inclusion of the millions of Brazilians living below the poverty line.”

In response to the poor socio-economic situation in the country, the World Bank approved in August 2004 a US$ 505 million loan for “Environmental Sustainability,” aimed at supporting Brazil’s goal of balancing economic growth with social development while maintaining and improving the natural environment.

Silva emphasized that “One of the most important features of the government’s environmental strategy - recognized and supported by this loan - is its strong focus on involving all relevant players around key issues in the sector, something unprecedented in Brazil.”

The program, it was claimed, aims to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of Brazil’s environmental management system (SINAMA) and to maintain environmentally sustainable use of natural resources through the government’s process of economic planning.

The loan is the first of three in a four-year program that will provide up to $1.2 billion.

Environmentalists’ Growing Concern

During the latter part of Lula’s first year as president, environmentalists were already voicing apprehensions over his apparent abandonment of various campaign promises on which he was elected, including tough policies aimed at restraining genetically modified food, nuclear power and Amazon deforestation.

In defense of the administration’s record on environmental issues, Minister Silva declared at the time that “the idea of an integrated policy is something new and has never been done before. You cannot expect to have a new paradigm fully in place after barely 9 months in power.”

Although the government felt the complaints in 2003 to be unwarranted (based on the sheer complexity of the issue and the limited time it had to deal with it), the credibility of the administration undoubtedly suffered a blow that continues to reverberate in public opinion, which grows increasingly negative towards an administration that still has not provided definitive signals.

Despite the business sector’s initial criticism of Lula’s left-of-center government, today the administration pursues pro-business policies and projects meant to spark economic growth.

As the first leftist president to be elected in Brazil, Lula initially faced a financial sector that suspiciously speculated whether his policies would lead the country into recession.

However, this has been avoided largely due to his emphasis on agricultural programs. Economic growth in 2004 was the highest in decades - with Brazil’s GDP increasing 5.2 percent - due to record high exports.

This economic growth was heavily dependent on the agribusiness, which wreaks havoc on the Amazon. It was against theses firms’ degradation of the Amazon that Dorothy Stang waged her private war.

In light of the activist’s murder, Lula responded to the claims that he favors agribusiness over environmental preservation by freezing development along an Amazonian highway for six months while creating an ecological reserve and a national park within the Amazon Region Protected Areas (ARPA), an initiative sponsored by Brazil, the World Bank and World Wildlife Fund.

Stang’s death, similar to numerous others active in the same cause, resulted from the unending battle between anarchic ranchers and landless farmers who, sometimes resorting to violence, think nothing of bypassing the law and seizing land and resources from indigenous reservations and national parks.

Adding to the controversy, cattle-ranching has been a leading cause of deforestation in the Amazon since the 1970s. Nevertheless, the sector’s enormous impact on Brazil’s economic prosperity cannot be denied.

Today, Brazil is the leading exporter of beef and second-largest exporter of soy, second only to the United States. Exports from Brazil’s agribusiness grew 11.1 percent in January 2005, and a steady growth rate is expected throughout the coming months.

Lula’s recent legalization of genetically modified soybeans is also expected to boost export figures, but the decision has sparked an outcry among environmentalists as well as Marina Silva, who many feel should resign her post as Environmental Minister in protest.

Although environmentalists acknowledge the need for growth, they nevertheless fear that these recent policies will accelerate Amazon deforestation and further threaten already marginalized indigenous communities.

Figures released by the Brazilian government show that in 2004 alone the Amazon suffered the destruction of 9,000 square miles, nearly the size of New Jersey.

Nevertheless, various mega-development projects are still in the works, such as the construction of a massive pipeline that carries natural gas from Bolivia into Brazil, thereby reducing Brazil’s reliance on costly diesel.

This effort, known as the Bolivia-Brazil Gas Pipeline Integration Facility, is expected to spur economic growth in the state of Amazonas, home to twenty million people. Twenty percent of the project will be financed by Petrobras, the Brazilian state energy company, which plans to invest $3 billion and lay 2,921 miles of natural gas pipeline by 2010.

The Huge Price of Development

Out of concern for the massive environmental ramifications of the pipeline, a specialized contracting firm has been hired to supervise the ecological aspects of the project.

However, this step doesn’t appease opponents who expect the pipeline to have a wrenching effect on the rainforest, including the displacement of indigenous communities.

José Freitas de Mascarenhas, a director of the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht and head of the National Industrial Confederation told Latin Trade, "Environmentalists aren't wrong to question Lula's Amazon infrastructure projects because they will have an environmental impact.”

He maintains, however, that “they need to understand that environmental concerns need to be weighed against urgently needed economic growth, which will improve Brazilians' quality of life. And for the economy to grow, better roads and more energy supplying dams need to be built, even if it means building them in the Amazon."

To the discontent of many environmental and indigenous activists, an explosion of construction throughout the Amazon has become today’s reality.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently announced their approval in February 2004 of an arrangement to spend up to $1 billion per year, through 2007, to accommodate Brazil’s plans for additional infrastructure projects, including the construction of the BR-163 highway.

Supporters of the highway, including fazendeiros and farm workers, anticipate faster shipping schedules and therefore more competitive commercial prospects.

In opposition to the project, activists assert that the road would incur further deforestation and invite colonization by an inundation of commercial agriculturalists and ranchers.

Those narrowly focused on rapid economic growth also expect major benefits from the Belo Monte Dam, which would provide power to foreign-owned and Brazilian-controlled aluminum plants that produce both for export and domestic consumption.

Eletronorte, the state power company that would oversee the dam project, is aggressively lobbying for its approval. “Belo Monte will have the lowest generating costs of any dam ever built in Brazil, or any dam on the drawing boards,” says Paulo Cesar Magalhaes Domingues, a member of the Eletronorte energy planning council.

“And this should attract industrial investors.” However, the dam’s opponents point out that it will flood the surrounding area, creating a 400 square foot reservoir.

Also contentious are the plans for a third nuclear power plant (Angra III) that has generated warranted concerns over its health and environmental hazards.

Although nuclear officials claim that investing in Angra III will help the country become energy self-sufficient, much of the public, aware of the persistent problems at the country’s two functioning reactors, is not convinced that nuclear power is the best option.

The Future Seems More Grey Than Green

The future of Brazil’s environmental and economic situation rests on the shoulders of President Lula and his administration. The issues are interdependent; unfortunately, the dominant view is that the success of one comes only at the expense of the other.

In this case, it is either environmental preservation or the possibility of a more promising economic future that frames the debate. Lula knows all too well the vital importance of these issues, as can be seen in his conflicting policy decisions since becoming president.

“Lula is trying to appease both the developmentalists and the environmentalists,” says Amaryllis Romano, an agribusiness and construction sector analyst with Tendencias, a São Paulo consulting firm.

“But if and when push comes to shove, I believe the developmentalists will win the day because after three years of near-zero economic growth, Lula has to go all out to get the economy moving, that or lose widespread popular support and part of his political base.”

For now, Lula is pursuing Brazilian economic strength through unsustainable development projects, whose ecological costs are known and pointed out by environmentalist critics.

In order to reduce poverty and turn Brazil into a fully developed nation, the president will likely continue to compromise his initial goal of ecological conservation for immediate economic growth.

Therefore, his critics increasingly focus on the need to manage the baleful ramifications of development, since they will be inevitably and unquestionably severe.

Although many of Lula’s undertakings are beneficial for economic progress, they need to be made compatible with ecological goals in order to curb the volume of environmental calamities left for future generations to endure.

It is not a question of choice but of developing an integrated approach. Lula’s opponents insist that both economic and ecological factors are essential and that pursuit of one does not necessarily sacrifice the other.

Lula’s dilemma exemplifies most governments’ obstacle to creating sustainable development policies: short-term economic interests synchronize better with election calendars than long-term sustainable development.

This analysis was prepared by Amanda Smallwood, COHA Research Associate.

The Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) - www.coha.org - is a think tank established in 1975 to discuss and promote inter-American relationship. Email: coha@coha.org.



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Comments (24)Add Comment
Money and Power
written by Guest, March 16, 2005
"The environment" is often used as an excuse for socialists to grab power or property. Any Amazon policy that leaves local residents in poverty is unacceptable. When you see people in canoes following cruise ships on the Amazon begging for an overboard handout, remember they they wouldn't need to if they could sell wood legally.
Jornal Nacional
written by Guest, March 16, 2005
But, If you give the people rights to sell and cut trees, would the amazon be destroyed more fast? How, let me think, if the governament give money to the people of the florest, do you count the indians? and this money is supose to buy material and a truck to cut and drop the trees to sell...after a while you need to plant something back, if not the soil will die, well if I was one of those people I would plant "soja" because is a good money maker crop...and I will need more trucks, roads, more work, more people to work, more money, more need for housing, citys, business, stores to sell products, city need politics, churchs, hospitals, and people still coming with work or not, all that. why? because, if you can make money, why making money only to eat? is a human condition...is normal wish, better things..for your family, nobody wants to work for nothing, they want the fruits and wish will last longer for their kids, bla, bla, bla....even the indians in Brazil can't survive anymore from the florest. I think your feelings come from the heath, but they are not a real solution for any side.
...
written by Guest, March 16, 2005
The faster they cut the f**ker down the faster consumer culture will implode as we all die in a cess pit of pollution and poisened air.

HAA Ha we all doomed, bring it on as the moneky once said
Economics minus 101
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
1. Wood can be cut and sold legally right now, so what does that have to do with people in canoes looking for handouts?

2. You would plant soja? not (with your own money) if it costs you more to plant it than you can sell it for, like this year for instance? Maybe next year too, when there is an even larger soja surplus?

Maybe the people in the canoes should produce the lumber to build wooden silos to store the soja until prices come back up above the cost of growing the beans and storing them.
Patrimonio Publico
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
Dee Argentinos ez selin Amizonia to dee Amerikanos.

Dee Amerikanos ez curting don all dee trees, an sellin dem to Sheena

Day iz makin halota mooney an day don pay no ting for de indios

Dee sheenezas don care bout no ting

an day gonna make a rei road to make de soja go to sheenah
Re: Wood
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
Including mohogany?
Re: Wood 2
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
Then why are there small high speed boats with wood evading authorities?
Cheio de pau
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
Then why are there small high speed boats with wood evading authorities

O senhor está enrolado

Na verdade Amazonas tem muito lancha cheio de pequeno pau de alta velocidade.
US tries to sink forests plan
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
The US plans to wreck a British initiative to commit the G8 states to combatting illegal logging in the world's threatened rainforests, a leaked memorandum revealed last night.

The development secretary, Hilary Benn, wants G8 environment and development ministers meeting in Derby tomorrow and on Friday to insist that all timber bought by official bodies in rich nations comes from properly managed forests.

The British initiative was prompted by Indonesia, which said corruption there was so rampant that the authorities did not have the power to tackle the supply of timber by criminal gangs. Indonesian government ministers urged rich nations to reduce demand for illegal supplies by requiring proper certificates showing wood had come from properly managed forests.

But industry lobbyists in the US have resisted moves to certify timber. A US state department memo leaked to the BBC's Newsnight shows that the US will refuse to sign up to the Benn initiative.

The state department head of forest policy, Stephanie Caswell, drafted a strategy in January designed to scupper the Benn plan, an "Input to strategy paper for G8 environment and development ministerial". Under what she described as "watch out items" is timber procurement. She said that "new import regulations/restrictions are unacceptable. We do not support issuance of 'action plan' by ministers. It should not be highlighted." The paper adds that the "US will work with Canada to hold back procurement actions and with Russia and Japan to dissuade them from supporting UK".

A state department spokesman confirmed that the paper was genuine, but said it was never formally accepted as US strategy. He confirmed that the US had reservations over proposals for new rules on timber procurement in America, but insisted that in this week's negotiations the US would allow other G8 partners to decide whether to support Mr Benn's scheme.

He said the US "might have had some discussions with Japan on the fringes of meetings about the issue" in G8 preparatory meetings, but said the Japanese would make up their own minds.

Europe is strongly backing Mr Benn's initiative, and the US tactics drew a furious response from rainforest campaigners. Faith Doherty of the Environmental Investigation Agency in the UK said: "This is outrageous. US business simply doesn't want any restrictions on its own practices."

Japan's foreign ministry told Newsnight that its position was much closer to the UK than to the US. It is understood that Russia is also lining up with the Europeans.

Agus Setyarso, an Indonesian expert on forests who works with Mr Benn's department, said the Indonesian government could not contain the organised crime rings carrying out the illegal logging without help. "The problem cannot be attacked from within the country, but from the market side. What we are asking from developed countries is twofold. One is to stop buying illegal timber from producer countries. The second is to help us in bringing back the systems in our country in such a way that the market and the law enforcement can be back to normal."

A department spokesman said it did not comment on leaked memos, and that negotiations over the statement for the end of the G8 meeting were continuing. Privately, however, officials were said to be angry at the US's refusal to join international efforts.

Other observers feel the state department's position is driven by free-market ideology. Forest campaigners say the US position is a serious blow, because if all the G8 nations signed up to the Benn plan it would guarantee that a substantial proportion of world timber was properly produced and send a clear signal to companies and exporting nations about the direction of future policy.

In an echo of the debate over climate change, the US is sceptical about G8 timber policies because China is a huge importer of stolen timber. Campaigners say China is unlikely to change unless rich countries put their house in order.

The US government is run by and for business, Bush record on enviromental issues is scandalous. But hey why give a s**t, as long as you got cheap gas for your rugged village people gay SUV, you can still get to the drive in McD´s no.
Let\'s get the USA involveld here...
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
so that we can bash them motherf**ker americans!

Long Live Castro Short Live Monkey Bush!
Re: The US government
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
Re: The US government is run by and for business.

Businesses makes JOBS!! You should try one.
US tries to sink forests plan
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
As much as this is an interesting article (the one poasted on the blog by a forum user), it doesn´t address the issue in the Amazon whereby 86% of the wood consumption and usage is National.

Everything is made so simple
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
Eu so queria dizer que Presevar a natureza nao e trabalho do governo mas assim do povo, Cada um de nos podemos fazer algo. Reciclando, protejendo arvores. Aqueles que levem isso a serio. Uma Idea coleque correntes a redor de arvore para que destruam essas maquinas de destruicao. A forca de cada um conta! Ajude nossas Florestas, ajudem nosso povo a proteger uma nova geracao.
UnderGround News
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
There is more corruption involved than we imagine in our dreams, Brazil is a living scandal when it come to politicians, we need a internal affair unit who investigate land distribution. The Mayor take bribes in exchange for land. And The "Sem Terras"(landless) become victms of a civil slavery. For you to live in my land you must work for me... Sometimes Those who know won't come forward for to reasons fear, and they are comfortable with the situation just like the Germans in the Nazi Era.
Jornal Nacional
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
recycling makes more water and energy comsuption..most people don't know but paper recycling is more expensive than cut new trees and produce new paper. aluminiun Cans and metal..etc.. is where the recycle works, because there is money behind it, is more cheap recylce and the companies pay for people to collect, but paper there's no money, and the worst is plastics, less money to recycle, and a lot more to recycle it, you can make others things with it..but companies and governament don't care to invest money on it..so you a good citzen recycle, the trash truck pick up..but we only recycle less than 20% of those plastic...and this is a good recycle country like Brazil..other countries is far less than that! is a good lie to make you feel better, does not work! is easy to get a land, a s**t land, and trow all there..you can get with some investment, the gas from those land for let's say a small + 30,000 houses city and the investment pays for it with the years! the end is is a lie, paper plastic those recycle there's nobody, I mean companies willing to invest there because is more cheap for them make new, and some those recycles you expend more money and resources to reuse it, like water, and that water needs to recycle too, the end is $$.
see the true
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
we in brazil think ,if we not put our people and our amy strongly on the amazonia we wil loose this territory, because the world interests in on this place above the marvelous speachs about preservation of the forest they ignores our rigths it is our land our country and if the other countrys have interests in preservation of the biodiversiti why they dont repopulation theys forests? one people one tree 180 milions? 180 milions trees taths wonderful .we need energy ,pipelines,roads to integrate latin america if we dont do this we wil prove our domination by the other peoples it s not gonna change because is a one state decision we have too many natural resources involved on this case to be blind.the people of brazil is peaceful we dont involved in wars we dont invade other countrys we dont think in more territory if the amazon is a world patrymoni then will be garded by us and our neighbors .I am from rio grande do sul the most southern state of brasil and here is a comon sense the amazonia is the future of the country on the century and we have to protect our future puting our army onthe forest to impose the state because the brazil is indivisible and if other peoples says wana create a area preservation for all mankind a ecological territori because the brazilians are destroing the nature ,it is dangerous for our country and the best way to destroy the rainforest is spread this arguments because the states think like states they will prefer destroy all the forest to give for the invaders the worl pressure wil dont be effectives because the south america is gona be autosuficient and the preservacionists *or others sates interests* hve to show the example rebuilding theyr enviroments fauna e flora and not transfering responsabilitis to other peoples because our human nature is like human nature ,infortunable is the think above all of brazilian citizens are brazilian state the constitucion .the brazil is sovereig and indissoluble ,it is a fact anione interventio on the amazonia wil be a 3 world war because have too mani natural resources involved niobium ,uranium,petroleum,or you think not have this in the area?,ferro,manganes,trilions dollars euros or ienes and in the regio not have microscopics states but too many countries largest and wit natural resources and all of them think like the brazilian if we dont be united we wana loose our sovereign it is human intincts aplied on the government .im sorry but is this.
Businesses makes JOBS!! You should try o
written by Guest, March 17, 2005
My grandaddy had a very well paid job as a concentration camp guard in Poland in the war.Perks were great lots of gold fillings.
Gtringos want to cut down the trees and
written by Guest, March 18, 2005
AP-
Jay Edwards, 46, an Indiana farmer, who manages an 11,115-acre (4,500-hectare) farm in Querencia for an American farm cooperative, said operating costs in Brazil are about the same as in the United States, but the land is considerably cheaper.

Brazil doesn't have a pot of gold at the end of its rainbow - farming its land successfully takes a lot of money, strategy and hard work.
Yet its challenges are, in part, what drew Jay Edwards to raise crops near Querência, Brazil.
A former Indiana farm boy, Edwards manages 8,000 acres of transitional woods 500 miles south of the rain forest. His investors/partners include two Bloomville, OH, farmers, Ed and Richard Harer.
Since ’94, when Edwards first moved to Querência, he has cleared 3,000 acres. Last year he planted 1,800 soybean acres and another 600 of corn. The rest is in pasture. It costs him $277.39/ acre to buy, clear and lime transitional woods, which has better soil than the cerrado brush land so many are rushing to develop.
American farmers he speaks with are envious of those costs.
“But in Brazil, when I tell people what it costs to clear land where we are, they think it's too high,” says Edwards

de agBrazil.com de repemt sumeu
THE ‘QUICK REPORT’
Comparing Roraima to Central Brazil
There is tremendous opportunity in Roraima, Brazil. In terms of “going, going, gone” the land is on the second “going”. There are lots of buyers and not that much meadow ground available. In terms of opportunity, I will compare it to Central Brazil, both now, and when we moved there in 1994.
Same:
The land in Roraima is going for R$900 – R$1200 per hectare. That’s $130 - $160 dollars per acre. The first land we bought in Querência, Central Brazil, was under $100/A. Now, ten years later, Querência, woodland is going for $230 dollars per acre and soybean ground for $650 dollars per acre. In Roraima, there is some difficulty in getting parts and inputs. That’s also how it was when we started in Central Brazil in 1994.

As of last year, Roraima has a place to dump soybeans. (one place – a co-op formed by the soybean farmers) In 1994, there was one place to dump soybeans in Querência – a condominium formed by the farmers. In Roraima, the state built and gave the facility to the farmer’s co-op. (pictured) In Querência, the farmers paid for their facility.

Their toughest time to control weeds is at harvest, after the leaves fall off – just like in Querência.

(pictured: Roraima soybeans)
Yields are 45 - 55 sacks/ha – even on first year fields! In Querência we are getting 60 sacks/ha on some of our 6 & 7 year old fields. Roraima farmers expect yields to continue rising as they typically do on new ground brought into production.



Different:
In Roraima, all the main roads are already paved. In Querência, we still don’t have a main road that is paved. (pictured: road to English Guiana) In Roraima, the electricity comes from Venezuela, and is dependable and plentiful. Most of the farms have electricity and are located on the paved highways, so far. In Querência, we have to generate our own electricity. (This is quite expensive.)


In Roraima, the big market for soybeans is Venezuela, only 212 km away from Boa Vista, the capital, and center of the flater lands and of the soybean production area. The other option is the Amazon river at Manaus, only 700 km away with an easy backhaul for trucks that come up from Manaus with supplies for the 250,000 population of Boa Vista. In Querência, we are still 2500 km away from the big ports. (This would not be true if we could use our river, closed down by the ecologists, but so far we still cannot.)

Considering the above, it is quite possible that Roraima could someday have a positive basis over Chicago, because Venezuela currently imports beans both from the USA and from southern Brazil (Paranagua), whereas the Boa Vista area is in Venezuela’s own backyard.

Inputs are now cheaper in Roraima than in Central Brazil. They SHOULD be! Fertilizer in Venezuela is cheap (half price), although not always available in the formulas the farmers need. Fuel is also much cheaper in Venezuela, but is not available for importation because of tariffs. Maybe it will always be like this, but the farmers are quite confident that they will eventually figure something out to benefit from these price differences.

In Querência, we cleared transitional woods. This is a very expensive process. In Roraima, we’ll be working with more of a natural meadow. Clearing cost go way down. Clearing Roraima meadows will cost 5% or less of what it costs to clear Querência’s transitional woods. Querência gets around 85 inches of rain per year; Roraima only 50-60 inches. (Less rain! We see this as a big plus!)

The seasons are “backwards” from the rest of Brazil. It begins raining towards the end of April and rains through August, tapering off to almost no rain by the end of September. Roraima farmers plant in May and harvest in September, allowing them to sell ‘off season’ beans. They are in the northern hemisphere!

In Querência, most of the soybeans have to be dried in a dryer. In Roraima, they get less rain overall and the rains cut off a little more abruptly, making it possible to harvest dryer soybeans. (pictured: Roraima soybeans being combined at 12.5%)

The Roraima meadow soils are different from Querência soils. They are poor, as are the soils of Querência, however, there is not a problem with toxic aluminum, therefore, only half of the lime is necessary in Roraima as compared to Central Brazil. The elevation of the potential soybean areas of Roraima is around 70 meters above sea level. Querência is around 370 meters above sea level.

While Querência has vast, flat agricultural expanses, Roraima’s immediately farmable land is on very gently rolling terrain. (left) Much of the land is tillable ‘as is’, but in some cases, acreage could be increased by ditching lowlands and by terracing a few of the slopes.

Land has risen over 50% in price just this last year.

“This opportunity is unparalleled to any I’ve ever
seen here in Brazil.” Jay Edwards
You hypocrits!
written by Guest, March 18, 2005
Ok, my American friends. How many acres of undisturbed forest do you have left? We STILL have a whole Amazon forest left. In fact, data collected by 1998 revealed that with ALL the development of the Amazon area, in 25 years, 10 % of the whole forest in the Brazilian side had been destroyed. Yes, the Amazon forest is the one lung left in the World, but that is exactly the point: You people and the Europeans destroyed the other lung(s) and now it is Brazil's responsibility to rescue the rest of you all. At the same time, while Brazil invests in renewable fuel sources to aleviate polution and reduce dependence on oil, you people just this week approved in the Senate the budgeting to start drilling in the Alaskan reserve, the only 5% left "in natura" of it.
Why don't you then stop the bulls**t of "do as I say" and start following your own prescriptions?
f**k the gringo bastards imperialists
written by Guest, March 18, 2005
these gringo farmers are destroying the amazon. these gringo thieve farmers needs to swim back to where they came from.
The point is
written by Guest, March 19, 2005
You are an American, and it is obvious from your English. along with all the other Americans who pretend to be Brazilians on this website

Ok, my American friends. How many acres of undisturbed forest do you have left? We STILL have a whole Amazon forest left. In fact, data collected by 1998 revealed that with ALL the development of the Amazon area, in 25 years, 10 % of the whole forest in the Brazilian side had been destroyed.

1. Yes, of course we Americans are OBVIOUS hypocrates when it comes to the environment, trees, etc.

2. the fact is that there is much less money to be made cutting down the trees after you subtrat the cost of paying all the bribes, sawmilling it up into lumber, aranging clandestine ships, buyers etc. than there is putting your money into Brazilian government paper. Morality/environment aside - why bother?

3. Why buy the land either before or after the trees are cut down? it is not worth a s**t for farming! Cattle? - it is the perverbial degraded pasture from day 1

4. Economics says leave the Amazon to the indians who were there first anyway, if that happens to be morally ecologically and politically correct, you have my sincere apologies

5. Americans who are clever enough to have money to invest would not be stupid enough to squander it in the Amazon region.

6,. I´m not talking about EcoPeople who have eco tours, hotels, WWF and other types of reserves/preserves etc. I´m talking about the standard "what does that mean! I wanna make money" types
You hypocrits II!
written by Guest, March 21, 2005
Finally someone who talks with conscience and not cheap agressivity.
No, my friend, I AM a Brazilian, but I studied 6 1/2 years of English in a language school in Rio and have been living in the US, as a permanent resident allien, for the last 15 years.
I do not disagree with you a bit on the criticism and on the FACT that we have to find other ways to develop, such as leaving farming for the Planalto Central and the South and preserve the Amazon Forest, as well as the Pantanal Matogrossense. The best way to generate income for the Natives in Brazil (Indios) would be to give them the right to explore the native flora for medicinal purposes and for cosmetic use. The fact is that there are rumors, which have so far resisted "going away", about Americans and Japanese cientists closing off parts of the only route connecting the capital of the state of Roraima and Manaus, for days at a time, in order to catalog and PATTENT the use of Amazon plants (this has been reported over and over by truck drivers which utilize that route). This is what I can't comprehend: On one side, we hear criticism about the distruction, on the other we see yet another source of revenue being taken away by the critics.
Yes, I would love to see not only American interests, but any foreign (to the Indians, that is) interest OUT of the Amazon. We need to get the "white man" out of the Amazon and let the native residents take care of it, which they did for thousands of years without ever destroying a thing...
The Australian experience
written by Guest, April 02, 2005
If the Amazon ends up largely deforested , the rainfall patterns will change and diminish . In the coming century the entire planet can expect less rainfall due to climate change so the destruction of the Amazon could not be at a worse time for everyone. Several thousand years ago Australia was largely forested , the Aborigines used fire a lot to burn the land , giving rise to grasslands and easier hunting. Over time the interior turned to desert and marginal country. Trees generate rain.
If the Amazon is cleared over the next decades , the "profit" from it will be short lived , unlike the consequences.
Brazil has the opportunity to do things better than other parts of the world , instead of emulating the worst of the world.

Funny creatures humans , we're so intent on destroying ourselves . And so many other creatures as well. This is the only planet we have , there is NOWHERE ELSE to go.
Good luck to our future generations , they are going to need it.

D
written by Guest, April 18, 2005
quote from the article-
"José Freitas de Mascarenhas, a director of the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht and head of the National Industrial Confederation told Latin Trade, "Environmentalists aren't wrong to question Lula's Amazon infrastructure projects because they will have an environmental impact.”

He maintains, however, that “they need to understand that environmental concerns need to be weighed against urgently needed economic growth, which will improve Brazilians' quality of life. And for the economy to grow, better roads and more energy supplying dams need to be built, even if it means building them in the Amazon." "

The efforts and realizations for a better quality of life for Brazilians´ should be done not for the big executives around the world, but for the amazon resident, the cabloco from the amazon.


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