Reuters – JBS, the world’s largest meatpacker, has reduced cattle purchases from ranches with “irregularities” such as illegal deforestation, federal prosecutors found in their latest round of audits in the Amazonian state of Para, released Nov. 9.
Prosecutors said in a briefing that six per cent of JBS’s audited cattle purchases came from farms potentially blacklisted for environmental or human-rights violations, down from nearly 17 per cent in the previous auditing cycle and as much as 32 per cent in the prior one.
“We are satisfied with the evolution. But our goal is to achieve 100 per cent compliance,” Liège Correia, sustainability director at JBS in Brazil, said in a statement.
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The statement noted that 94 per cent compliance is an improvement over the score of 83 per cent compliance in the previous cycle.
JBS and other major meatpackers reached a settlement with federal prosecutors in 2013 in which the companies agreed not to buy cattle from ranches that were cleared illegally since 2008 or otherwise found in breach environmental laws.
“Companies that do not adapt and do not carry out audits are harming the Amazon,” said prosecutor Ricardo Negrini in a statement. By failing to monitor their own supply chains, the companies would be “encouraging crime,” he added.
Beef production is associated with deforestation in Brazil as land grabbers have for decades cleared the Amazon rainforest to graze livestock or grow crops.
A separate audit of South America’s largest beef exporter, Minerva, showed no nonconformities in Para, according to the prosecutors’ presentation.