Economy

Brazil's booming agricultural sector draws cash and controversy

Fueled by Chinese demand, Brazil is set to dominate soy production, but the government must address the powerful agribusiness lobby if it hopes to curb Amazon deforestation by 2030.

A worker sifts coffee beans at the Camocim coffee plantation in Domingos Martins, Espírito Santo state, Brazil. [Carl De Souza/AFP]
A worker sifts coffee beans at the Camocim coffee plantation in Domingos Martins, Espírito Santo state, Brazil. [Carl De Souza/AFP]

By AFP |

RIO DE JANEIRO -- With its massive output of soybeans, beef, cotton and now corn, Brazil has become one of the world's top agricultural powers. But its agribusiness industry also faces criticism, especially over the destruction of the Amazon rainforest.

Here is an overview of the South American agricultural giant, which, more than a decade after passing the United States as the world's biggest soy and beef exporter, is set to overtake US corn exports this year and is now eying the cotton crown.

Big and growing

Brazil's agriculture ministry triumphantly announced recently the sector's output will hit a record 1.15 trillion BRL ($230 billion) this year.

The country -- the world's fifth largest by surface area -- is the top producer and exporter of sugar, coffee and soy.

Aerial view of combine harvesters being used to harvest soybeans in a field in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. [Silvio Avila/AFP]
Aerial view of combine harvesters being used to harvest soybeans in a field in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. [Silvio Avila/AFP]

It is also the world's top supplier of chicken and beef and second in cotton after the United States.

Agribusiness accounts for almost one-fourth of Brazil's economy. It provided half its exports in the first half of the year.

Roots of the boom

Brazil's emergence as an agricultural giant goes back to Portuguese colonial times. Fortunes were made here on a succession of commodities: sugarcane, then cotton, rubber and finally coffee, which reigned supreme for more than a century.

But the turning point came in the 1960s and 70s, when Brazil's then military regime ushered in the so-called "green revolution" and encouraged the expansion of agriculture to the Amazon and Cerrado savanna.

Fueled by Chinese demand, Brazil would become the dominant producer of soy, a widely used ingredient in animal feed worldwide.

"Research on genetic improvements, techniques to correct soil acidity and fertilizers" -- plus pesticide development -- have allowed Brazil to expand soy, corn and cotton production into tropical regions, state agricultural research company Embrapa told AFP.

Brazil is able to harvest two and sometimes three crops a year, thanks to its climate and the development of zero-till planting and genetically modified (GMO) crops -- which today account for 80 to 90% of the country's soy, corn and cotton output.

Production of all three has tripled in the past two decades.

But the boom has come with controversy.

The agribusiness industry has helped fuel deforestation in the Amazon, which President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has vowed to halt.

Polemics over high deforestation rates, pesticides and GMO use have hurt Brazil's brand in some places, including the European Union, which has held off ratifying a free-trade deal with South American bloc Mercosur over environmental issues.

Under pressure

Lula will have to come to terms with the powerful agribusiness lobby if he wants to keep his promise to stop Amazon deforestation by 2030.

Lula, who needs the sector's help to keep the economy growing, is looking to open new markets for Brazilian producers via trade deals, notably with top buyer China.

For its part, the agricultural sector is keen to polish its image, with international clients increasingly demanding deforestation-free products.

"Meat companies are working particularly hard to make their supply chains traceable, which is fundamental for export value," said Luiz Carlos Correa Carvalho, president of the Brazilian Agribusiness Association.

Grain producers meanwhile tout the recent adoption of a sustainable farming deal aimed at protecting the Cerrado.

Environmentalists say that is not enough.

"Real progress would be zero deforestation," said Cristiane Mazzetti of Greenpeace Brazil, who called for new production models that protect biodiversity.

The issue is urgent, especially since climate change is already starting to hit agricultural output.

"We have to evolve toward a more sustainable model," said Britaldo Soares Filho, a researcher on environmental modeling at the University of Minas Gerais.

"When agribusiness harms the environment, it's shooting itself in the foot."

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