The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Soya sources under scrutiny

- EMILY BEAMENT

Chicken fed on soya which comes from farms linked to fire and deforestat­ion in Brazil are being sold in Britain’s supermarke­ts and fast food outlets, campaigner­s warn.

An investigat­ion by the Bureau of Investigat­ive Journalism and Greenpeace UK’s Unearthed tracked soya beans transporte­d from suppliers in Brazil’s Cerrado, where land is burned to clear it for crops, for chicken feed in the UK

The soya beans in the shipment were processed and fed to chickens reared in the UK by agribusine­ss Cargill, which sells them to companies including Tesco, Asda, Lidl, Nando’s and McDonald ’s , the investigat­ion found.

In response, all the companies said they are committed to tackling deforestat­ion linked to supply chains.

Research by consultanc­y Aidenviron­ment found that land used or owned by nine of Cargill’s suppliers of soya in the Cerrado, has seen 800 square kilometres of deforestat­ion and more than 12,000 fires recorded since 2015.

The Cerrado is a huge area to the south of the Amazon, made up of trees, shrubs and plains that store large amounts of carbon dioxide, and is home to indigenous communitie­s and a wide array of wildlife.

But it is being cleared for for soya production, most of which is used in animal feed. The findings come as the government is proposing new legislatio­n that will make it illegal for British companies to import food and feed linked to illegal destructio­n in the country of origin.

Cargill said it is continuing to build towards a deforestat­ion-free soya supply chain and it estimates 95.68% of its soya in Brazil in 2018-2019 was deforestat­ion and conversion free.

A spokesman for the company said: “Cargill does not and will not supply soy from farmers who clear land in protected areas.”

An Asda spokesman said it is working with suppliers to ensure that by 2025 all of its soya is physically certified as sustainabl­e.

The McDonald ’s Corporatio­n said globally by the end of 2019, 71% of soya sourced for feed of chicken used in the c o m p a n y ’s products supported deforestat­ionfree supply chains.

A Tesco spokesman said: “We need our suppliers, i n d u s t r y, NGOs and government­s to work with us to end deforestat­ion and protect our environmen­t.”

 ??  ?? INVESTIGAT­ION: Chicken feed can come from deforested farms in Brazil.
INVESTIGAT­ION: Chicken feed can come from deforested farms in Brazil.

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