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PRESS RELEASE
Greenpeace shuts down soya export terminal of leading Amazon destroyer |
Santarem, Brazil - A team of climbers from the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise shut down Cargill's illegal soya export facility in the heart of the Amazon rainforest today. The soya, which is exported to Europe as animal feed, is grown in deforested areas of the Amazon rainforest.
![]() The US based Cargill corporation burns large areas of rainforest to prepare for soya plantations. |
Greenpeace Amazon Forest Campaign Coordinator, Paulo Adario, said: "American corporations like Cargill are eating up the Amazon to grow soya. Meat fed on this soya ends up on supermarket shelves and fast food counters, like Tesco and Kentucky Fried Chicken, across Europe. Our volunteers will stay here as long as possible to prevent soya from the world's most precious rainforest being exported to Europe to feed chickens, pigs and cows."
Recent Greenpeace investigations documented in ‘Eating up the Amazon' (1), shows that the Cargill export facility is not only illegal (2) but is also laundering soya from illegal deforestation to the world market (3). It operates 13 silos in the Amazon rainforest - more than any other company.
Soya is now a leading cause of rainforest destruction in the Brazilian Amazon. In total, an estimated 1.2 million hectares of what used to be rainforest have already - mostly illegally - been destroyed to grow soybeans. Cargill makes no secret of helping establish soya farms in the Amazon, some of whom are complicit in other illegal activities such as land grabbing and slavery (4).
"US corporations like Cargill must stop seeing the Amazon as a place to expand their soya businesses, and instead see it as the world's greatest rainforest that's in need of urgent protection," said Greenpeace International forest campaign coordinator, Gavin Edwards.
In recent weeks, Greenpeace has taken action in Europe against soya imports from Cargill's Amazon port, including preventing soya ships unloading in Amsterdam. Cargill responded to allegations yesterday claiming that it had an ‘environmentally friendly' approach to encouraging soya plantations in the Amazon. But it has made no commitment to curb ongoing deforestation, and will not actually ensure protection of the Amazon.
Greenpeace is calling on Cargill and the European food industry to ensure that the soya and animal feed they buy and use does not contribute to the destruction of the Amazon and that none of their soya products are genetically engineered.
Greenpeace is an independent, campaigning organisation that uses non-violent, creative confrontation to expose global environmental problems, and to force solutions essential to a green and peaceful future.
Article has been adapted from a news release issued by Greenpeace. Click here for the original news release.
