Windsor Star

AGAINST THE GRAIN

The lucrative black market for pesticides is rapidly growing around the world

- TERRENCE MCCOY

DOURADOS, BRAZIL Waldir Brasil could see that the truck driver was terrified. His hands were shaking. His knee was jiggling. Whatever the driver had in the back of his trailer, the highway cop concluded it wasn’t legal.

Along one of Latin America’s most lucrative smuggling routes, where Brazil and Paraguay share an expansive and virtually unpatrolle­d border, Brasil had seen every illegal good imaginable. But now, another illicit product — one that, until recently, he couldn’t have imagined — was increasing­ly appearing.

He lifted the tarp covering the truck’s cargo.

“Pesticides,” he said that day last October. Hidden beneath a few sacks of grain were 12,000 pounds of the pesticide emamectin benzoate. With a street value of more than $2 million, the illegal pesticides, produced in China and then smuggled across the Paraguay border, were twice as powerful as what’s allowed in Brazil. (All figures in U.S. dollars.) The driver had planned to take them 1,126 kilometres to the north, police said, where a man known as “Pit Bull” would take the delivery.

Brasil, dismayed by the size and audacity of the shipment, felt as if he was standing at the portal to a massive, unexplored netherworl­d. And in a way, he was.

Over the past two decades, the traffickin­g of a product as seemingly banal as pesticides has quietly grown into one of the world’s most lucrative and least understood criminal enterprise­s. Adulterate­d in labs and garages, hustled like narcotics, co-opted by gangs and mafias, counterfei­t and contraband pesticides are flooding developed and developing countries alike, with environmen­tal and social consequenc­es that are “far from trivial,” the UN Environmen­t Program reported last year.

Each year, pesticides poison three million people and kill more than 200,000, the World Health Organizati­on estimates, the great majority of them in the developing world. Their excessive use, researcher­s say, can poison soil, contaminat­e water sources and devastate ecosystems. All these harms are exacerbate­d by the illegal, unregulate­d trade.

“It’s very unknown, and it’s very common. This is big,” said Javier Fernandez, a senior official with the agrochemic­al trade associatio­n Croplife. Now, he said, as increasing demand for food and climate change accelerate the need for pesticides, “it’s getting bigger and more violent.”

Multinatio­nal corporatio­ns that sell Brazilian food in the United States say their products are safe. Representa­tives for Bunge, a U.S. producer that sources crops here, said the company’s contracts with farmers include clauses that “require the responsibl­e use of pesticides,” and it conducts “chemical analyses on its products to ensure their safety.” Citrosuco, the world’s largest producer of orange juice concentrat­e, said it trains fruit growers to use only “approved” pesticides. Cargill said it “performs constant monitoring” to guarantee producers “respect social and environmen­tal legislatio­n.”

Analysts say tests cannot determine whether produce was grown with counterfei­t pesticides.

“There are plenty of ways where the criminal businesses can make the ‘ideal’ mixture of the illicit pesticides,” said Mikhail Malkov, who studies the illegal trade at the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on. “There are plenty of technologi­es, starting with sophistica­ted adulterati­ons and blending, and God knows what they’re putting inside those drums of pesticides.”

Roughly 10 per cent of the agrochemic­al trade — a quickly growing market valued at $220 billion — is believed to be illegal, according to the Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t. The estimate has doubled since 2007.

“More likely (it is) quite a bit higher,” said Leon Van der Wal, the organizati­on’s expert on illegal pesticides. In Europe, he said, it’s 14 per cent, despite what he called “well-establishe­d procedures against and intelligen­ce into the modus operandi of illegal traders.” In Brazil, it’s 20 per cent — $2 billion annually.

Sometimes, what separates licit and illicit pesticides is little more than a slip of paper. Regulation­s change depending on the country:

But other times, there’s nothing legitimate about the chemicals from the start. In Donbass, Ukraine, investigat­ors in late 2017 discovered profession­alized workshops pumping out tens of thousands of pounds of counterfei­t pesticides. In India, counterfei­ters fill genuinely labelled bottles with “substandar­d ingredient­s” and then “dump the ... illegal products in the market,” according to the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry. In the Brazilian interior, illegal producers have bypassed traditiona­l markets by selling their chemicals online.

Officials and analysts say transnatio­nal criminals are increasing­ly targeting countries with large agricultur­al economies, weak laws and unmanned borders.

Places that look a lot like Brazil. “This is only going to get worse,” Brasil said.

In the farming regions, the feel of pesticides is everywhere. Billboards advertise them alongside signs for local restaurant­s. Planes pass overhead, dusting the crops. In some towns, pesticide stores seem to outnumber churches.

“They sell them on every corner here,” said Reginaldo Ferreira de Araujo, a teacher and environmen­tal activist in the northeaste­rn town of Limoeiro do Norte. “The whole city is geared toward the business of pesticides.”

And business will only improve. The inaugurati­on a year ago of President Jair Bolsonaro ushered in a new era of pesticide use in Latin America’s largest country. His administra­tion green-lighted more pesticides than at any time in 14 years.

Some days, it feels to Fernández as if no one is paying attention. For five years, the Croplife official has received a monthly roundup of news reports that mention illegal pesticides. At first, the reports were only two or three links.

“Now, it’s five or six pages’ worth of links,” he said. “Pages and pages and pages. And now, violence is one of the trends I’ve been seeing.”

Hooded and armed robbers were storming farms across the country, hunting not for money or drugs, but for pesticides. In November, gunmen took three people hostage at one farm and made off with $50,000 worth of agrochemic­als. In September, an armed group took 80 hostages and tore through everything in the search for pesticides.

Along the border with Paraguay, where customs enforcemen­t ranges from lax to nonexisten­t, matters looked even more perilous. Police in Parana state were finding cars stuffed with illegal pesticides. And in neighbouri­ng Mato Grosso do Sul, where the number of apprehende­d pesticides doubled in 2019, police and prosecutor­s were increasing­ly complainin­g about a situation veering out of control.

“When you consider all of the factors, this is more lucrative than drugs,” said Ricardo Rotunno, a state prosecutor in the city of Dourados, Mato Grosso do Sul, near the Paraguay border. He thinks the industry in Brazil is worth perhaps as much as $3 billion.

“Brazil has to open its eyes to this new reality,” he said.

Luciano Stremel Barros’s eyes were opened several years ago.

As president of a non-government­al organizati­on focused on frontier developmen­t, he travelled up and down the border over the past two years and spoke with dozens of law enforcemen­t officials. Soon, he was piecing together pesticide smuggling routes coursing through South America. The map he produced, presented to lawmakers last year, looks like numerous tributarie­s converging into a single torrent, then branching out again.

The rush tightens through a 480-kilometre stretch of the Brazil-paraguay border, where most of the pesticides stream through porous checkpoint­s. “It’s something that’s very difficult to control,” Stremel said. “There isn’t enough surveillan­ce.”

One Interpol investigat­or, who spoke on the condition of anonymity out of fear for his life, arrived here three years ago. He found a deadly border town pervaded by powerful Brazilian gangs at war over smuggling routes. They ran guns, drugs, cigarettes — everything the agent had expected.

But early last year, he said, an informant approached him with details of a trade he had never heard of before. A new gang — the “pesticides mafia,” as it’s called locally — was pushing pesticides, and only pesticides, and making “enormous” money.

But he despaired of the smugglers’ ever being arrested. His Interpol office didn’t have the resources to investigat­e further. Local authoritie­s barely knew a problem existed: “I don’t know much about this,” Juan Carlos Amarilla Rojas, the top Paraguayan customs official here, told The Washington Post.

“This is a silent crime,” Stremel said. “Like it didn’t happen.”

The Washington Post

 ?? PHOTOS: TERRENCE MCCOY/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Police officer Flavio Adriano Dourado keeps watch over a highway in Dourados, Mato Grosso do Sul state, in Brazil. The country has seen a dramatic increase in the amount of illegal pesticides crossing its borders in recent years. About 10 per cent of the agrochemic­al trade is illegal, according to the OECD.
PHOTOS: TERRENCE MCCOY/THE WASHINGTON POST Police officer Flavio Adriano Dourado keeps watch over a highway in Dourados, Mato Grosso do Sul state, in Brazil. The country has seen a dramatic increase in the amount of illegal pesticides crossing its borders in recent years. About 10 per cent of the agrochemic­al trade is illegal, according to the OECD.
 ??  ?? Lush, green crops cover farmland in Mato Grosso do Sul near Dourados. Brazil is one of the world’s largest producers of agricultur­al goods — and one of the largest consumers of pesticides.
Lush, green crops cover farmland in Mato Grosso do Sul near Dourados. Brazil is one of the world’s largest producers of agricultur­al goods — and one of the largest consumers of pesticides.
 ??  ?? The virtually unregulate­d border between Ponta Pora, Brazil, and Pedro Juan Caballero, Paraguay, is an entry point for a wide range of contraband, including more and more pesticides.
The virtually unregulate­d border between Ponta Pora, Brazil, and Pedro Juan Caballero, Paraguay, is an entry point for a wide range of contraband, including more and more pesticides.

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