The Citizen (KZN)

Natural pesticides gain ground in Brazilian farms

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– Inspecting a thriving green field, Brazilian farmer Adriano Cruvinel is beaming: using a fraction of the chemical products he used to, he is growing even more soya beans, thanks to natural pesticides.

Agricultur­al powerhouse Brazil may be the world leader in chemical pesticide use, but Cruvinel is part of a growing trend of farmers turning to natural products known as “biopestici­des”.

“Our soya is doing great,” says the 36-year-old agricultur­al engineer, giving a tour of his 1 400 hectare farm in the central-western county of Montividiu, as combine harvesters work their way across a field.

Brazil, the world’s biggest exporter of soya, corn and cotton, is also the top consumer of chemical pesticides: nearly 720 000 metric tons in 2021, or one-fifth of global sales, according to the UN's Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on.

Seeking to improve his profits, in 2016 Cruvinel started transition­ing toward so-called “regenerati­ve” agricultur­e.

The technique seeks to restore the soil’s biodiversi­ty, replacing chemical fertiliser­s and pesticides with natural alternativ­es.

He still uses geneticall­y modified soya, widespread in Brazil. But near those fields he built an ultra-modern laboratory and factory. Inside, refrigerat­ors conserve fungi and bacteria, some harvested from forestland on his farm.

He cultivates them en masse in vats, then uses them to treat his fields.

“Here, we imitate nature on a giant scale,” says Cruvinel, who has replaced 76% of the chemical

pesticides he formerly used with natural products.

The approach is good for health and the environmen­t, but also business: His production costs have fallen by 61%, while his soya yields have risen by 13%, he says.

Natural pesticides “could revolution­ise Brazilian and global agricultur­e,” says Marcos Rodrigues de Faria, a researcher at Embrapa, Brazil’s public agricultur­al research agency.

But “there’s a long way to go”, he adds.

Brazil still relies heavily on chemical pesticides, known as “agrotoxico­s,” or “agri-toxic” products. Natural products grew

from four percent of total pesticide sales in Brazil in 2020 to nine percent in 2022. Their use has expanded four times faster in Brazil than internatio­nally, says Amalia Borsari, of CropLife Brazil, an organisati­on representi­ng the agricultur­al chemicals industry.

The agribusine­ss sector accounts for nearly a quarter of Latin America’s biggest economy, making the pesticide debate politicall­y charged.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva signed a Bill into law in December softening regulation­s on agricultur­al chemicals.

He used his line-item veto to block some controvers­ial aspects

of the Bill. But the final text significan­tly lowered the bar for regulatory approval of new pesticides, drawing scathing criticism from environmen­talists.

Chemicals that can cause cancer and mutations, or harm the environmen­t are no longer automatica­lly banned – only those found to represent an “unacceptab­le risk”.

The stakes go beyond Brazil. The country's massive use of pesticides is one of the main objections voiced by opponents of a landmark trade deal between the European Union and South American bloc Mercosur, in which Brazil is the biggest player. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? GOING GREEN. Agronomist Adriano Cruvinel inspects the soya bean plantation on Bom Jardim Lagoano farm in Montividiu, Goias State, Brazil recently. The use of biopestici­des is an incipient practice in Brazil.
Picture: AFP GOING GREEN. Agronomist Adriano Cruvinel inspects the soya bean plantation on Bom Jardim Lagoano farm in Montividiu, Goias State, Brazil recently. The use of biopestici­des is an incipient practice in Brazil.

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