Brazilian firms track Amazonian cattle to root out deforestation

By 
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: November 29, 2023

,

Reuters – A group of small Brazilian companies has announced a scheme to certify Amazonian cattle processed for meat and leather that have been reared without causing deforestation.

The group has yet to include the biggest meatpackers and covers a fraction of Brazil’s 234 million-head cattle herd.

The Certification of Origin and Traceability Implementation Initiative places tracking devices on individual cattle. So far it has tracked more than 113,000 animals since a pilot began in the second half of 2023, the companies said in a statement. They expect to track more than 200,000 animals by the middle of January 2024.

Read Also

This memorial for Bob Mazer was posted on Mazergroup's official Facebook page July 8. Photo: Facebook/Mazergroup

Mazergroup’s Bob Mazer dies

Mazergroup’s Bob Mazer, who helped grow his family’s company into a string of farm equipment dealerships and the main dealer for New Holland machinery in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, died July 6 from cancer.

One of the five companies involved in the initiative, leather maker Durlicouros, said it can monitor its entire supply chain.

“Soon our European customers will be able to enter a code on a platform and have access to all information about the animal that generated this product,” said Ivens Domingos, Durlicouros sustainability director.

In the Amazon, the world’s largest tropical rainforest, 9,001 square kilometres were deforested in the 12-month period ending in July.

The Nov. 16 statement, which cited government data, said some 40 per cent of Brazilian cattle production originates in nine Amazon states.

Cattle pasture is the most common initial use for deforested areas in the Amazon and neighbouring Cerrado savanna, a practice that faces strict legal limits but continues illegally.

The situation risks Brazil’s climate commitments to end deforestation by 2030 and threatens exports of commodities such as beef and leather to environment-conscious importers.

Para, the Brazilian state with the highest deforestation levels, is where the tracking initiative began.

It can be replicated elsewhere, according to Roberto Paulinelli, director of meatpacker Frigorifico Rio Maria, another of the companies in the group.

The initiative also includes environmental services companies Niceplanet Assessoria, SBCert and Green Level Environment Strategy.

explore

Stories from our other publications