As drought and floods wreak havoc across Brazil, farmers are feeling the effects of the climate emergency but despite poor harvests and rotting crops, they are fighting to protect their right to fell more trees and convert grasslands.
The southern Rio Grande do Sul state offers a clear example of the damage wrought by consecutive disasters: after prolonged droughts, analysts were predicting a record soybean harvest this year but instead the area was hit by devastating floods in June.
Around 170 people were killed and half a million people were driven from their homes. The floods also wiped out crops, with farmers predicting a drop of up to 15% in the soybean harvest in the world’s top grower.
“I now have debt from the droughts and from last year’s crop,” said Graziele de Camargo, a soy and wheat producer in São Sepé municipality who had invested heavily to try to make up for previous losses.
“But I haven’t reaped anything,” said Camargo, a leader of the SOS Agro movement, which is seeking financial help from the government to cope with the effects of the climate crisis.
Farmers are also under pressure in Brazil’s midwest, a grains powerhouse, and in the north where drought has damaged crops while wildfires have also raged. And they are bracing for more fires over the coming months.
Last year’s drought was the most severe on record in the Amazon. River levels fell sharply, disrupting shipments of grain for export.
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Sem ter sido pauta em qualquer audiência pública, o Projeto de Lei (PL) 36/2021 é uma afronta à população brasileira, que depende da proteção da vegetação nativa e dos serviços ecossistêmicos por ela garantidos. A proposta, que avança sem debate democrático, flexibiliza importantes regras ambientais, premia infratores e coloca em risco a proteção ambiental do país. Abaixo estão os principais motivos para rejeitar o PL 36/2021.