To Prevent Deforestation, Brazilian Supermarkets Ban Amazon Meat 94
Hugh Pickens writes writes "BBC reports that the Brazilian Association of Supermarkets, representing 2,800 members, says it will no longer sell meat from cattle raised in the rainforest, a step they hope will cut down on the illegal use of rainforest where huge swathes have been turned into land for pasture and soy plantations. Public Prosecutor Daniel Cesar Azeredo Avelino says consumers will benefit from the deal. 'The agreement foresees a series of specific actions to inform the consumer about the origin of the meat both through the internet and at the supermarkets,' says Azeredo. 'We hope that the big chains will quickly take action.' The supermarkets' pledge comes as part of an initiative by the Public Prosecutor's Office to deprive the meat producers of outlets and an internet campaign aimed at informing Brazilian consumers of the ethics of boycotting meat from Amazonian sources is also planned. Brazil's Greenpeace advocacy group says the growth of the cattle industry in the Amazon is the single biggest cause of deforestation. For decades now, Brazilian authorities have battled illegal logging and other activities that continue to reduce the rainforest and in January the Brazilian government announced it plans to prepare an inventory of the trees in the Amazon rainforest. The Forestry Ministry said the census would take four years to complete and would provide detailed data on tree species, soils and biodiversity in the world's largest rainforest. The last such exhaustive survey was conducted more than three decades ago but didn't help stop deforestation."
Closing the door a little too late? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Otherwise, a brazilian supermarket chain eschewing the sale of "amazon meat" is as useful as a bunch of hippies saying they won't work for no defense contractor no sirreee or a large bunch of idiots around the earth turning off non-essential power-consumption for one hour as occurred during the last week or weekend. It's a strange vain showing off of one's ideals and beliefs that will have very little impact or result in the real world.
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Why, yes, I am quite a cynic.
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The UN does nothing but sit there and pretend to play politics. If someone breaks the rule they do nothing about it and it's not too late, they can always regrow trees or whatever.
Re:Closing the door a little too late? (Score:5, Funny)
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Amazon sells meat? Excuse me, I gotta update my shopping list.
Yes, but they've carefully limited their selection to not offend anyone after the horsemeat scandal:
http://www.amazon.com/ThinkGeek-Canned-Unicorn-Meat/dp/B004CRYE2C/qid=1364496739&sr=8-1 [amazon.com]
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Isn't this Closing the door a little too late?
Actually, it's not even that, it's purely symbolic. They need to stop McDonalds from selling Amazon meat if they want to make an impact.
It's a strange vain showing off of one's ideals and beliefs that will have very little impact or result in the real world.
You had me until "vain".
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McDonald's sells Amazon meat? Are they actually barefaced lying when they say in their publicity they use (in the US) US sourced meat, and in Europe, European meat? I'm not a fan of Ronnie's Burger Bar but I'm sure the myth that they use Amazon meat was put to rest years ago.
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Of course they don't use Amazon meat.
They don't use meat.
No, I meant "vain" as in "vanity". (Score:2)
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It's vain to do "show off charity", and saying "I refuse to buy ze blood diamonds becau
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Isn't performing a symbolic action to show others that you are performing that symbolic action "vanity"?
Only if you're doing it so that you can enjoy them seeing you do it. If you are trying to lead by example in order to make a better world, no, that's not vanity. Intent is always relevant.
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Ah. Okay. I concede your point. I had not considered that particular type of intention in my thought process. Thanks for the explanation.
Re:Closing the door a little too late? (Score:5, Interesting)
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you sir understand us very well... kudos!
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It wouldn't be fair to tell the Brazilians not to cut down their forests after we cut down most of ours. What we need is a system similar to carbon credits that makes it profitable for developing countries to keep their forests.
Amazon Meat (Score:1)
...that's from the same source as Tuscan Whole Milk, 1 gal, 128 fl. oz. [amazon.com], right?
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I'd have thought someone with a name like yours would be aware of the other meaning of "Amazon".
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Why not put penalties in place if it is illegal? (Score:2)
I don't really get it. If it is illegal to raise a cattle in rainforest, put these people in jail or fine heavily. They won't do that, but they expect same people to label the cattle 'It comes from illegal farm in Amazon, don't buy it, because we are breaking the law' ? They are cutting trees and bribing officials, but not putting a label will be beyond their capablities?
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Answer isn't less cattle, but more. (Score:3, Interesting)
There's a recent TED talk where, counterintuitively, using more livestock instead of less is an actually proven way to fix desertification:
http://www.ted.com/talks/allan_savory_how_to_green_the_world_s_deserts_and_reverse_climate_change.html
Re:Answer isn't less cattle, but more. (Score:4, Interesting)
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Pseudoscience alert! From KCET's Chris Clarke
http://www.kcet.org/updaily/socal_focus/commentary/east-ca/learn-how-to-hate-the-desert-with-ted.html [kcet.org]
Savory's talk is full of red flags, and to document and rebut each one would take more time than is really wise to spend on the talk. But three stand out as especially egregious.
The notion that bare, unvegetated soil in the American desert is an evil to be avoided flies in the face of everything we know about desert soil science. Bare soil in the desert includes d
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It's the "deserts are evil" mentality that is at fault here with the Savory talk - and with much of the support behind it. Deserts have their own unique ecosystem supporting their own unique niche of animal life. "Repairing" an ecosystem that doesn't need repairing is one of the most destructive practices I have ever come across because of a misunderstanding that somehow desert ecosystems are a waste of land unless you can get cattle to graze on it, and remove much of the niches to substitute them for those
Europe can help! (Score:2)
Europe has tons of prime Romanian meat that they would be happy to provide at a killer price.
. . . you may whinny and snort after eating it, though. But you will run as fast as a Triple Crown winner!
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Deforestation for farmland aside. (Score:4, Insightful)
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I hate to break it to you, but it's not your call.
Might may not make right, but it decides whose call it is.
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Try us.
You'll regret those words if you have any water left when the water wars come to a head. This is not going to be like Orkut.
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And in a double whammy effect, the billions of cows we've bred around the world produce a "shit ton" (hah!) of methane; a greenhouse gas 20x more potent than CO2.
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Methane reacts with O2 to produce a lot of CO2 though. It doesn't linger very long.
The only thing possibly wrong with this proposal is that Greenpeace is historically stupid. "By far the biggest cause" could be "what we're most aware of" and turn out to be the smallest factor ever. Like when Greenpeace gave Apple the lowest score for "being good to the environment," while Apple was using less packaging, less toxic shit, and less energy to manufacture their products by far than everyone else in the indus
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Where did you get that bullshit from? Even if the rainforests have sequestrated all the CO2 in the atmosphere, that's just 0.04% compared to the 20% of oxygen in it. We could burn all the forests and carbon reserves without running out of oxygen. Also, forest don't produce oxygen actively, they only store carbon. Not to mention that you ignored the effect of marine life.
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He could mean that 20% of the capacity for converting CO2 into H2O is in the fucking rainforest. That's a flow resource, and you're thinking of a stock resource.
Except that a mature forest produces as much O2 as it consumes. There's no net flow there.
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Not true. Plants are the only producers of oxygen (algae ...), but not the only consumers. Plants have a relatively low metabolic rate, and are the providers of food--fruit, leaves, etc--for other things. They produce much more oxygen than they consume (where 'production' is the refinement of CO2 into free O2).
Trees are the largest net producers per growing area of oxygen (and also, massive--grass isn't exactly heavy). During the day, when plants are producing oxygen, animals are absorbing that oxygen
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Trees are the largest net producers per growing area of oxygen (and also, massive--grass isn't exactly heavy). During the day, when plants are producing oxygen, animals are absorbing that oxygen; at night, when plants are absorbing oxygen, animals are also absorbing oxygen.
...and both of them are using the oxygen to "burn" carbon compounds recently produced in the same forest by releasing the same amount of oxygen. Unless the forest is continuously sequestering carbon, e.g., by continuously dumping dead biomass into some sort of anaerobic environment, there is no long-term net output of oxygen. (Alternatively, you can turn the trees into books and sequester the all the carbon in libraries! E-books are destroying the world by preventing this from happening! ;-))
One tree thus produces between 27 and 33 liters of oxygen per day. That's processing of between 42 and 100 kg of CO2 per tree per day, net flow.
100 kg of CO2 p
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You mean with the leaves being eaten off by bugs and all? With the root system growing continuously? The acorns a large oak produces? Twigs and branches breaking off in the wind? That's how trees handle wind, by the way. Look up the engineering on tree houses. A big concern is the wind impact and uprooting the tree--the root system has to get stronger, because the tree's natural method of handling wind is to lose leaves, then twigs, then large branches; it won't lose a house. If the tree kept its le
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He could mean that 20% of the capacity for converting CO2 into H2O is in the fucking rainforest.
That would be photofission and would be quite amazing if plants could do that. Photosynthesis [wikipedia.org] doesn't work that way. Plants only produce twice as much oxygen as the amount of carbon trapped in them. Now there is an amount of carbon that gets into the ground in forests and form coal deposits, but that is insignificant on human timescales. Rainforests are pretty much a stock resource. The only real carbon-negative forests are forestries.
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I think that's 20% of oxygen from land. Most oxygen is coming from ocean plant life.
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Rainforests make 20% of our oxygen. And we let people cut that shit down?
No, they don't, unless they're actually growing. You can't make oxygen from CO2 without producing biomass that gets deposited and doesn't rot away.
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That is something of a falsehood. Most of the oxygen generated by a rainforest is consumed by it during the night. The global supply of oxygen is largely generated by phytoplankton blooms in the oceans.
Profit from exploitation (Score:2)
Customers who purchased this meat also purchased:
- cheap clothes from Vietnam where factories pollute their environment
- this nice device from Chine where laborers health is affected by bad working circumstances
- fish caught against over-fishing rules
Free market (Score:1)
Clearly this is a case of government interference in the free market. If all that CO2 sequestration and oxygen were worth more money than cows, the invisible hand of the market would have led to an abundant rain forest rather than cattle ranches.
Re:Free market (Score:5, Insightful)
You're probably being sarcastic, but it's easy to make a profit fucking over the environment if you don't have to eat the consequences.
Tragedy of the commons is instructive on why sometimes government intervention is a wise course of action.
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Is it really?
I find it odd that nature itself doesn't get a say in any of this. I don't know about you but I don't see anyone asking the animals how much their habitat is worth.
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Tragedy of the commons is instructive on why sometimes government intervention is a wise course of action.
'The commons' generally only exists because of government intervention. Otherwise someone would already own the place and, if it's valuable, take better care of it.
I'm not surprised (Score:1)
Hunting Female Warriors [wikipedia.org] is difficult, its a question of whether they get you before you get them
force (Score:2)
Given the lucrative profits possible from abusing the rain forest I don't think anything short of force of arms is going to put a stop to it.
Brazil needs to crack down on this and make it a crime, and then actually put some money behind law enforcement.
I should hope so (Score:2)
Very amusing, and cynical (Score:2)
Most deforestation in Brazil is caused by slash and burn to make room for sugar beet production which is then turned into ethanol in order to make Brazil energy self sufficient.
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you are wrong. not only cattle take much more space but the rainforest soil is not suitable for crops. and it's sugar cane not sugar beet. and most of the production of sugar cane and ethanol occurs thousands of miles away in the southeast and northeast brazil.
What about amazon sugar? (Score:2)
Seems that is just a big problem as beef.
Political Economics & V.V. (Score:1)
Meat in Brazil is an export comodity. The bulk of production is handled by economic concerns the physicalmeat industry, and farmers, are attached, subordonate and subservient to. Also, controlled by. Since, these conglomerates usually have strong ties to banking, finance, agro supplies and machinery sales.
The economic crunch ("austerity") means the local people are already below the last rung of product substitution. Cattle meat rarely figures in their food basket, except in the very worst quality.
Election
Flamewars Insue (Score:1)
Save the Planet: 16 Ways (Score:1)
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Margareth Thatcher suggested something like that. Guess which banks end up holding the derivatives, mortgages, mer(d)s ... etc. ? And get to do the foreclosure. Latvia, Greece, Cyprus, Italy.
In other news, What right do those "primitive tribesmen" in the"middle east" (and elsewhere) have to control and dictate the use of resources the civilized world needs for its industry, progress, and wealth. A lot of Europeans saidthat. Not a few USAns, too.
The same thing happened in the US. "Primitive Indians" had no v
Logging and exporting (Score:1)
It would be much better to outlaw wood exports/trade from Brazil.
Go to any furniture store in Brazil and you cannot find any mahogany piece, because it is extermely regulated.
Go to any good USA/Japan furniture store and you will find brazilian finest pieces from the rainforest.
Logging and farming are the main reasons, you must get rid of both.
How dare we! (Score:1)
Don't cut down your forests like we in the US did! All it did was give us a massively powerful, unparalleled economy inventing things and advancing the human condition at unprecidented rates.