World Bank Drops Loan to Brazilian Cattle Giant

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lindsey

Late last night the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the private lending arm of the World Bank, withdrew the $90 million dollar loan to Brazil’s cattle giant Bertin. The loan was used for the company to further expand into the Amazon region, which was causing destruction of the rainforest and fuelling global climate change.  While on one hand Lula’s government was making commitments to reduce deforestation rates in the Amazon, on the other hand the IFC was helping to expand the Brazilian cattle sector which is now the largest single source of deforestation in the world.  

Globally forest destruction accounts for almost 20 percent of global warming causing emissions, which is more climate pollution than all the world's cars, trucks, trains, planes, and ships combined. Brazil ranks as the world’s fourth biggest climate polluter, largely because of Amazon destruction. Although the IFC published a benign statement on its website late last night about the terms of the cancellation, this announcement comes just two weeks after the release of the Greenpeace report “Slaughtering the Amazon.”

The Greenpeace report revealed how the financial backing of the Brazilian cattle industry by the IFC and President Lula’s government via its national development bank (BNDES) has led the industry to become the largest single source of deforestation in the world and a major source of global greenhouse gas emissions. The report also shows how cattle products from ranches involved in illegal deforestation in the Amazon rainforest --as well as in the invasion of indigenous lands and slavery--contaminates the supply chains of top brands such as Adidas, Reebok, Timberland, Geox, Clarks, Nike, Carrefour, Gucci, IKEA, Kraft, and Wal-Mart.

By helping Bertin to expand into the Amazon, the IFC has been driving further destruction of the rainforest for products that often make their way into global meat or leather products while undermining Brazil’s commitments to reducing deforestation. For a bank that portrays itself as the “knowledge bank”, this was a very ill conceived and thoroughly destructive use of international resources. The last $30 million dollar  hand-out from the IFC will no longer be given to Bertin and it is anticipated that the IFC will ask Bertin to return early the $60 million dollars it has already invested in the company. The World Bank Group is set to lend another $1.3 billion dollars to Brazil for “environmental protection.”

At Greenpeace we are calling for a commitment to Zero Deforestation and global solutions that will protect forests and reduce forest related emissions that are making global warming worse. In the fight to save the Amazon, every step will count so we are asking US consumers to join us in taking on companies like Nike, Timberland, and Adidas which cannot demonstrate that the leather in our shoes is not driving deforestation in the Amazon.

 -Lindsey 

Comments (16)

  • rational
    Permalink rational on June 14, 2009
    Yesterday I bought some $129 Nike running shoes... I wish I'd read your article first! I've already worn them outside, but mabe I could clean them up enough to return. I don't think they have ANY leather on them... What shoud I do?

    What brand of running shoes should I buy? Does Greenpeace have some of "what's-safe-to-buy" database that could be put on line so people will know what they should and shouldn't buy??

    I also bought a belt that I'm pretty sure IS made of leather. Do they make plastic belts?

    Now I'm going to have trouble sleeping!
  • Permalink Eva Moly on June 17, 2009
    Cattle has always been a major issue not only because of deforestation, but also because of the competition they lead with aboriginal animals. When the bovines have been in a given place for a long time, the ecosystem usually have already adapted to such a change. In the Amazons though, while vital to the planet as Earth's most important lungs, forests do not allow for raising of bovines. The best alternative would be to raise smaller animals that would not need deforestation, or only very partial, cutting only a single tree between each on a given area. Eva Moly,  student
  • Permalink fusion01 on June 18, 2009
    'The best alternative would be to raise smaller animals that would not need deforestation, or only very partial, cutting only a single tree between each on a given area.'

    I'd think the only REAL alternative is to NOT EAT MEAT. I don't and therefore don't support the deforestation directly. I always say, if we're to change the current state of affairs, it requires personal sacrifice. Keep eating meat and fish, flying long-distance for a holiday, importing your foodstuffs etc - all the niceties of modern day life - the world will suffer for it.
  • mikeg
    Permalink mikeg on June 19, 2009
    @rational:

    we don't have a guide to green shoes, unfortunately. but there are plenty of companies making shoes from recycled materials, organic cotton, hemp, etc. Simple comes to mind immediately, but i don't know that they make a running shoe.
  • louisianahomebuilder
    Permalink louisianahomebuilder on August 16, 2009
    I wonder how that convo went...

    "Hey, can we bum $90 million dollars?"
    "For what?"
    "Destroy massive amounts of rain forest in order to deliver some meat to plates"
    "Sure thing"

    /it obviously didn't go like that. I'm not sure what would be worse though: ignoring the obvious or simply not caring.
  • Permalink Aviie on August 19, 2009
    I think it's a great step of IFC, and not only world bank also everyone should take step to save our environment. Everyone know about global warming! If we want to survive, we should sacrifice, because living is more important than comfort!

    So, please try to use re-cycled products instead of leather products!
  • Permalink online store software on August 24, 2009
    deforestation must stop and all that contribute to it. Big corporations really need to take more into consideration than just big profits.
  • Permalink alexandrabucuresti on November 19, 2009
    This is very useful indeed. The alternative would be to use sprees.. either method is really compulsory I think..
  • Permalink shirdibaba on December 15, 2009
    This is very helpful. More articles like these should be released and more blogs about the environment should be everywhere instead of reading the lives of nonsense celebrities. It's time to take an action before it's too late.
  • Permalink mathewbracken on December 25, 2009
    Nice tips.This is very useful indeed. The alternative would be to use sprees.. either method is really compulsory I think
  • Permalink mathewbracken on December 25, 2009
    I think it's a great step of IFC, and not only world bank also everyone should take step to save our environment.
  • marinabracken
    Permalink marinabracken on December 26, 2009
    Good post.....Valuable information for all.I will recommend my friends to read this for sure…
  • Permalink bestantivirus software on January 18, 2010
    Great article and some good information. Ii is about time something was done about this.
  • Permalink affordable H. on January 19, 2010
    thanks
  • Permalink charityorganizations on February 03, 2010
    very good post, some good points are made. I believe this kind of thing all the time.
  • Permalink charityorganizations on February 03, 2010
    That is a great shame, banks should be doing more to help charitable causes
  •  

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