Brazil’s Environment Czar Lashes Out at Transgenic Soybeans

Brazil’s Minister of Environment, Marina Silva, voiced her opposition yesterday, in Curitiba, capital of Paraná state, to the irregular cultivation of transgenic soybeans, before the National Congress has defined its position on the Biosecurity Law.

During a meeting with Governor Roberto Requião, the Minister asserted that Brazilian research on conventional soybeans should not be disregarded, just because of a presumed economic advantage.


“The cultivation of soybeans smuggled from Argentina creates a situation that isn’t the best one for the country. The storehouse of research the country possesses on conventional soybeans cannot be overlooked in consequence of just any investment or opportunity,” she observed.

Silva judged the government’s effort to maintain Paraná as a transgenic-free zone deserving of inclusion in the Biosecurity Law.


“I consider Governor Requião’s position a legitimate one, because it is based on market opportunities and the growing tendency among consumers to desire products with guaranteed benefits – in terms of both health and the environment. This effort must be recognized in the legal norm that is being established,” she went on to say.

In addition to the economic factor, the Minister recalled the principle of caution that the country promised to respect in international treaties.


“We are trying to implant a virtuous process that safeguards the international commitments that Brazil assumed when it ratified the biodiversity convention – the Cartagena Protocol – and when it signaled in its bill that it would be defending the interests of researchers, consumers, and producers, through the principle of caution,” she affirmed.

Silva explained that there are two tendencies when it comes to approval of the Biosecurity Law.


One is the approval of the substitute bill in the Chamber of Deputies, in accordance with the Ministry of Environment’s proposal.


The other is represented by the Senate technical commissions, which have yet to issue an opinion.

The Minister said that Paraná is in harmony with the federal government in the formulation of environmental policies.


“The construction of biodiversity corridors, the restoration of riverbank/streambank woods, the elimination of trash dumps, and other activities that are going on in Paraná have the support of the Ministry of Environment, which is also providing incentives to similar programs in other states.”

The Minister was in Paraná for the inauguration of the Program to Protect Remnants of Araucaria, one of the joint state/federal programs to try to revert the degraded condition of Parana’s conifer forests.

Agência Brasil
Reporter: Lúcia Nórcio
Translator: David Silberstein

Tags:

You May Also Like

48% of Brazilian Containers Are Recycled

Brazil is a global standard for the recycling of materials, according to the executive ...

Still a Marxist

President Fernando Henrique Cardoso unabashedly stands by everything he ever wrote and insists that, ...

Showdown Near Between Brazil and AIDS Drugs Labs

The Brazilian government must soon decide about breaking the patents of three antiretroviral medications ...

Brazil’s Ethics Council Doesn’t Accept Ex-Chief of Staff Arguments

Brazilian Federal Deputy Júlio Delgado (PSB-Minas Gerais state), reporter of the process to deprive ...

Au Naturel Bodies

American photographer Spencer Tunick talked about his disappointment with the small number of women ...

Brazil Still Not Positive about Size of New Found Oilfield

Brazil's government controlled oil multinational Petrobras said late Monday, April 14, that more conclusive ...

Brazil Announces Cut of Red Tape and Global Investors Get Bullish

Latin American markets were mostly higher, thanks to upbeat earnings reports in Brazil, optimism ...

Brazilian Reporters Threatened When Investigating City Hospital

A reporter and a photographer from the daily A Tarde, from Salvador, the capital ...

Expect Rice to Bring the Cold War to Brazil and Latin America

When it comes to Latin America, Condoleezza Rice has barely uttered a word, other ...

Favelas Will Change When People Feel Proud of Living There

When someone hears about life in the slums of Brazil, Kenya or other places ...