Zürcher Nachrichten - Race to save the Amazon leaves out Brazil's crucial savanna

EUR -
AED 4.331023
AFN 77.824044
ALL 96.204991
AMD 446.932449
ANG 2.110769
AOA 1081.2786
ARS 1712.071881
AUD 1.697104
AWG 2.122466
AZN 2.007924
BAM 1.945772
BBD 2.377447
BDT 144.365962
BGN 1.980226
BHD 0.444554
BIF 3495.583857
BMD 1.179148
BND 1.499385
BOB 8.186157
BRL 6.208092
BSD 1.180416
BTN 107.944132
BWP 15.536586
BYN 3.37998
BYR 23111.298228
BZD 2.373975
CAD 1.614548
CDF 2541.063785
CHF 0.92033
CLF 0.025849
CLP 1020.682673
CNY 8.190951
CNH 8.184436
COP 4260.603203
CRC 585.686437
CUC 1.179148
CUP 31.247419
CVE 109.699626
CZK 24.301878
DJF 209.557895
DKK 7.468724
DOP 74.227828
DZD 153.236192
EGP 55.532091
ERN 17.687218
ETB 184.008454
FJD 2.627969
FKP 0.860488
GBP 0.863461
GEL 3.177812
GGP 0.860488
GHS 12.943292
GIP 0.860488
GMD 86.077934
GNF 10357.749649
GTQ 9.05732
GYD 246.967642
HKD 9.209086
HNL 31.15941
HRK 7.528271
HTG 154.704646
HUF 380.935486
IDR 19781.384647
ILS 3.656349
IMP 0.860488
INR 107.264075
IQD 1546.330471
IRR 49671.604158
ISK 145.212068
JEP 0.860488
JMD 185.337161
JOD 0.835984
JPY 183.495423
KES 152.263492
KGS 103.115876
KHR 4752.706874
KMF 489.346754
KPW 1061.233082
KRW 1712.346624
KWD 0.362222
KYD 0.983672
KZT 596.092892
LAK 25385.276168
LBP 105707.384156
LKR 365.540714
LRD 218.970746
LSL 18.8985
LTL 3.481717
LVL 0.713255
LYD 7.457659
MAD 10.764223
MDL 19.984849
MGA 5263.893095
MKD 61.629401
MMK 2476.194563
MNT 4203.220257
MOP 9.495959
MRU 46.872427
MUR 53.827748
MVR 18.229311
MWK 2046.76002
MXN 20.530367
MYR 4.648174
MZN 75.182584
NAD 18.8985
NGN 1644.156287
NIO 43.436137
NOK 11.451318
NPR 172.711339
NZD 1.965421
OMR 0.453398
PAB 1.180421
PEN 3.97571
PGK 5.057932
PHP 69.416105
PKR 330.421765
PLN 4.221797
PYG 7848.549884
QAR 4.315061
RON 5.095451
RSD 117.405364
RUB 90.14055
RWF 1725.705999
SAR 4.422011
SBD 9.494043
SCR 17.685253
SDG 709.260254
SEK 10.58085
SGD 1.500743
SHP 0.884666
SLE 28.682728
SLL 24726.14037
SOS 674.628797
SRD 44.837082
STD 24405.980193
STN 24.374379
SVC 10.328898
SYP 13040.874167
SZL 18.889646
THB 37.237836
TJS 11.024827
TMT 4.127018
TND 3.405548
TOP 2.839105
TRY 51.257794
TTD 7.991879
TWD 37.251051
TZS 3052.21225
UAH 50.836046
UGX 4216.270048
USD 1.179148
UYU 45.793985
UZS 14430.626958
VES 436.038953
VND 30681.427545
VUV 140.503382
WST 3.196411
XAF 652.621173
XAG 0.014976
XAU 0.000253
XCD 3.186706
XCG 2.127336
XDR 0.810328
XOF 652.593641
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.020373
ZAR 19.00208
ZMK 10613.749147
ZMW 23.165591
ZWL 379.685133
  • CMSC

    -0.0350

    23.725

    -0.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    16.7

    +4.19%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    -1.4700

    188.97

    -0.78%

  • RELX

    -0.2650

    35.535

    -0.75%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.8300

    84.44

    -0.98%

  • BTI

    0.3700

    61.05

    +0.61%

  • RIO

    1.4700

    92.5

    +1.59%

  • BP

    -0.1250

    37.755

    -0.33%

  • GSK

    0.7900

    52.39

    +1.51%

  • BCC

    1.7800

    82.59

    +2.16%

  • CMSD

    0.0350

    24.085

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.2400

    14.89

    +1.61%

  • BCE

    -0.0890

    25.771

    -0.35%

  • JRI

    0.0380

    13.118

    +0.29%

Race to save the Amazon leaves out Brazil's crucial savanna
Race to save the Amazon leaves out Brazil's crucial savanna / Photo: Nelson ALMEIDA - AFP

Race to save the Amazon leaves out Brazil's crucial savanna

People thought she was crazy when Carminha Maria Missio and her family bought what was considered "sterile" land in the Brazilian savanna to farm soybeans, she says.

Text size:

Missio, a beaming grandmother named one of the most powerful women in agriculture by Forbes Brasil, remembers the surprised reactions when her poor southern family sold their land in 1979 and moved across the country to the "Cerrado," a huge savanna below the Amazon rainforest.

Little-known outside Brazil, the Cerrado is Earth's most biodiverse savanna, nicknamed the "cradle of waters" for its vital rivers and aquifers.

But it is disappearing at a record rate, its twisted trees and grasslands replaced by endless fields of grains and cotton.

Even as Brazil races to stop Amazon deforestation, experts warn environmental destruction is surging in the Cerrado, fueling violent land-grabs and exacerbating the climate crisis.

Some scientists say the Amazon and Cerrado are equally important for the planet.

But when she arrived in the northeastern state of Bahia, the Cerrado was widely seen as a "wasteland," says Missio, 67.

"Locals said the only thing you could grow here was lizards," she laughs.

Sleeping under tarps and sweating in the tropical sun, her family joined a stream of pioneers who literally bet the farm on transforming this once-vast wilderness.

It worked: the Cerrado is now a global breadbasket, making Brazil the world's top exporter of soybeans and, this year, corn.

It grew half the 155 million metric tons of soy Brazil produced last year, used in the animal feed that puts beef, chicken and pork on plates worldwide.

- Spillover effect -

Today, half the Cerrado is farmland.

In places like Sao Desiderio, Bahia, the county leading Brazil in deforestation this year, the landscape after harvest season looks like a giant quilt, the green patches of remaining savanna surrounded by vast brown fields.

The savanna is typically cleared using a "correntao" -- a large chain strung between two bulldozers and dragged across the ground, razing everything in its path.

Fire is also used. A Switzerland-sized area has burned in the Cerrado this year, according to research group MapBiomas.

Farming the sandy, nutrient-poor soil is all about scale: producers invest big in irrigation, fertilizer and pesticides, financed by global commodity giants like US-based Bunge and Cargill.

But experts warn irrigation and soil degradation are drying the region. A recent study found river flows have decreased 15 percent from their historic averages, and will fall 34 percent by 2050.

The Cerrado has become a "sacrificial ecosystem," says Leticia Verdi, of Brazilian environmental group ISPN.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has largely delivered on his promise to protect the world's biggest rainforest, halving deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon since taking office in January. But destruction has increased 27 percent in the Cerrado from last year, including 659 square kilometers (254 square miles) razed in September, a record for the month.

"There's been a spillover of deforestation from the Amazon to the Cerrado," says Verdi.

- 'Upside-down Amazon' -

Yet "the Cerrado is just as important as the Amazon in confronting the climate crisis," Rodrigo Agostinho, head of Brazil's environmental agency, IBAMA, told AFP.

Scientists say the two are intricately linked.

The savanna depends on the precipitation generated by the rainforest. The rainforest meanwhile depends on the savanna to feed the rivers crisscrossing its southern half.

Both remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere -- the rainforest through its billions of trees, the savanna via its deep, carbon-absorbing root systems, dubbed an "upside-down Amazon."

The Cerrado is a mirror-image of the Amazon in other ways, too.

In the Amazon, an estimated 95 percent of deforestation is illegal. In the Cerrado, around 95 percent is officially authorized, according to IBAMA -- a result, environmentalists say, of outsize agribusiness influence on regional authorities.

Brazilian law allows landowners in the Amazon to deforest just 20 percent of their property. The opposite applies in most of the Cerrado: farmers must preserve just 20 percent of their land.

- 'Green land-grabbing' -

In some cases, that law is being brutally twisted.

Joao da Silva lives in a shack in a rural community with no indoor plumbing or electricity. But the 50-year-old smallholder has five security cameras mounted outside, powered by solar panels.

He had them installed after gunmen surrounded his home in 2018 while he was out, threatening his mother at gunpoint.

Gunmen in a pickup later tried to ram his car and threatened to kill him, he says.

"They told me to get off my land, that the 'owners' were evicting us," says the father of five.

He also survived a stabbing attack at a local market in 2016.

Activists say Da Silva -- whose name has been changed for his safety -- and his neighbors are victims of "green land-grabbing," in which landholders seize un-deforested territory to claim it as their 20-percent protected reserves.

Leaders of several traditional cattle-herding communities told AFP of being targeted by gunmen who killed their cows, torched their farm buildings and opened fire on them.

Such violence is common in Brazil, where 377 land and environmental defenders have been killed since 2012, according to rights group Global Witness.

- Three little words -

Working the room with a preacher's charisma, Mario Alberto dos Santos is giving 40 middle-school students a crash course in sustainable agriculture in the poor Cerrado town of Ponte de Mateus.

Dos Santos, 43, a professor at the Federal University of Western Bahia, teaches teenagers eco-friendly techniques like growing native species, organic farming and interspersing crops with trees.

The program aims to train the next generation to farm with nature, not against it.

It is a "long road to walk," Dos Santos admits.

"We need to profoundly change the food system, not just in Brazil, but worldwide," he says.

Climate campaigners are meanwhile pushing commodity-importing countries to demand clean environmental and human-rights records from suppliers.

The European Union adopted a regulation this year requiring companies to show products are deforestation-free.

The policy is a "game-changer" for the Amazon, says Daniel Santos, of environmental group WWF-Brasil.

But it excludes most of the Cerrado -- not technically "forest."

Environmentalists are pushing the EU to extend the policy to "other wooded lands."

Adding those three words could transform the Cerrado, Santos says.

"It's a major opportunity to transition to more sustainable farming."

O.Pereira--NZN