Business World

Global commodity traders to monitor deforestat­ion in Brazil’s savannah

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BRASILIA — Six major commoditie­s traders, including Cargill Inc and Bunge Ltd, have agreed to a common mechanism to monitor soybean supply chains for deforestat­ion in Brazil’s vast Cerrado savannah, according to a statement on Friday.

The Cerrado covers roughly a quarter of Brazil’s territory, the nation’s second-largest biome after the Amazon rainforest. Its plants sink deep roots into the ground, often likened to an upside down forest, forming a major carbon sink whose preservati­on is vital to the fight against global warming.

Companies belonging to the Soft Commoditie­s Forum network that signed onto the agreement to monitor their soy supply chains in the Cerrado include Archer Daniels Midland Co, COFCO Internatio­nal, Glencore Plc’s agricultur­e unit and Louis Dreyfus Company, according to a Forum statement.

The companies agreed to detail how much soy is coming from the Cerrado and purchases made in municipali­ties at the highest risk of deforestat­ion. The first findings will be presented in June.

The statement did not say the companies agreed to end deforestat­ion in the Cerrado.

“We are continuous­ly seeking to rise to the challenge of feeding the world’s growing population in a sustainabl­e manner,” Louis Dreyfus Chief Executive Ian McIntosh said, according to the statement.

“This means being mindful to preserve the environmen­t, including areas of importance for their biodiversi­ty. Brazil’s Cerrado Biome is one such area, where every effort must be made to ensure that any agricultur­al expansion occurs hand-in-hand with the preservati­on of native vegetation.”

Roughly half of the biome’s native forest and other vegetation have been destroyed in the past 50 years, with newly cleared land feeding Brazil’s soy boom. The country is the world’s largest exporter of soybeans.

Last year, Louis Dreyfus became the first major trader to commit specifical­ly not to buy soy from newly deforested land in the Cerrado, although it gave no specific deadline for doing so.

While many other trading firms have committed to reaching zero net deforestat­ion in their supply chains globally by certain dates, they have yet to make specific pledges to end destructio­n in the Brazilian savannah. —

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