Environment

Pará, a deforestation hotspot, wants to become a green leader

Under pressure after racking up high Amazon deforestation rates, the state of Pará is now targeting the bioeconomy

Production of fruit pulp in the Tapajós National Forest, Pará. Photo: Flavio Forner / ASL Brazil/CC BY NC

São Félix do Xingu, in the Amazon state of Pará, is a place of superlatives: it is the municipality with the second-largest annual greenhouse gas emissions in Brazil, the second-highest rate of deforestation over the last 15 years, and the largest cattle herd in the country. It also has some of the Amazon region’s lowest levels of development.

This municipality is also something of a symbol for Pará’s broader condition. The state has topped the table for deforestation in the Amazon since 2006, driven by the expansion of cattle ranching, soybean farming, and the construction of roads and ports to facilitate production flow to domestic and international markets.

But amid growing pressure to reverse the devastation in the Amazon, and the election of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva — who has promised to put environmental issues high on his agenda — there are signals that the state may be looking to take a greener turn.

In November 2022, Pará Governor Helder Barbalho was part of Lula’s entourage at the United Nations COP27 climate summit in Egypt, where Brazil stated its intention to host the COP30 in the Amazon in 2025. If the country is selected, Belém, the capital of Pará, will host the event. 

Mr. Barbalho also used his time at the conference to present Pará’s Bioeconomy Plan (PlanBio), which targets net-zero emissions from land use in the state by 2036.

The plan focuses on avoiding deforestation by valuing, restoring, and promoting sustainable use of its biological resources — particularly its standing forests — as part of a “bioeconomy.” 

The state expects to invest BRL 1.2 billion (USD 244 million) in biodiversity-linked initiatives over the next five years and estimates that its bioeconomy could generate annual revenue of BRL 170 billion by 2040, roughly equivalent to the state’s current GDP.

The initiative is unprecedented at the government level, with projects driving the bioeconomy largely having been led by environmental organizations and traditional communities at smaller scales.

So, is the state’s economic model — and its image as a major deforester — about to change?

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Cattle farm in the Amazonian state of Pará. Photo: Paralaxis/Shutterstock

For Celma de Oliveira, project coordinator for the environmental organization Imaflora and a resident of São Félix do Xingu, there are promising developments at both the federal level with Lula’s election, and the state level with the PlanBio.

“There is hope, with this resumption of a more participative government and of ministries and councils that were dismantled,” Ms. de Oliveira says, referring to the hollowing-out of environmental agencies seen during the presidency of Jair Bolsonaro (2019-2022). “Now, civil society needs to participate in management in order for it to function.”

Cattle, soy, and small producers

Cattle ranching and soybean farming have increasingly come to dominate the landscape in Pará, with pastures and plantations growing ever more extensive at the expense of the state’s forests.

Soy crops occupied 849,000 hectares of land in Pará in 2022, an increase of 70 percent from 2017. Meanwhile, the state has the second largest cattle herd in the country, with 26.7 million head and a rate of 1.5 heads per hectare, considered to be relatively low productivity.

“This stocking rate of Pará cattle is very low and would need to be dramatically improved to avoid it having to grow every year by land expansion,” says Sérgio Leitão, founder and executive director of the Escolhas Institute, which carries out studies focused on sustainable development.

Amid this continued expansion, many small-scale farmers in Pará are doing their best to resist the temptation to turn to soy and cattle production, and to clear land to make way for them.

Maria Josefa Neves, 51, owns a rural property in the community of Tancredo Neves, 120 kilometers from the center of São Félix do Xingu. On one of her 12 hectares, on land that was once pasture, she practices agroforestry, planting a variety of native crops such as manioc, cacao and acerola, a cherry-like fruit.

On the rest of the property, Ms. Neves allows the natural vegetation to regenerate. “I live in the middle of the bush, and monkeys come right up to the edge of the house,” she says.

The area around where she lives, however, is all deforested.

Ms. Neves is president of the Association of Women Producers of Fruit Pulp (AMPPF), founded in 2012. She grows pigeon peas and fruit in parallel with other trees, adopting techniques that make use of shade and help to ensure the necessary nutrients for the soil without applying chemicals, instead making use of homemade biofertilizers. Ms. Neves supplies fruit pulp to schools in the region.

Cocoa production in the community of Tancredo Neves, Pará. Photo: Diego Formiga/Imaflora
Cocoa production in the community of Tancredo Neves, Pará. Photo: Diego Formiga/Imaflora

The AMPPF has 55 members, who for the past three years have been selling their fruit pulp to the federal government, which in turn distributes it. This partnership has seen strong progress: their contract with the authorities this year rose to BRL 351,000, up from BRL 231,000 in 2022.

However, to scale up and open to new markets, the association needs investment. For example, it currently has only a small cold room for storing its production and one refrigerated truck to transport it.

Celma de Oliveira says that a lack of dedicated public policies inhibits the expansion of agroecological producers such as the AMPFF and that one of the main problems such initiatives face is difficulty in accessing credit.

“There is specific credit for the agroforestry system, but the banks put up a series of obstacles, so the farmers are unable to generate enough income to diversify their production,” says Ms. de Oliveira, who provides assistance to the AMPFF via Imaflora. She adds that it is “much easier” to get credit for livestock.

Pará state’s environment secretary, José Mauro de Almeida, agrees that it is necessary to create better conditions for these products to be marketed: “We have good initiatives in agroforestry, bio-jewelry, bio-cosmetics, bio-products in general, but they are not gaining scale.”

For this, Mr. Almeida says it is necessary to improve infrastructure, logistics, and industrialization while keeping the processing of the product in the region. “In Paris, you can buy freeze-dried açaí powder at 200 euros a kilo. It has high added value — much higher than soy —, but it is necessary for there to be industrialization,” he says.

PlanBio is expected to respond to some of these demands in an attempt to limit the expansion of the agricultural frontier, Mr. Almeida claims. The plan highlights the importance of a sustainable economic model, and will reportedly see the creation of “entrepreneurship centers” in five regions of the state, as well as a “bioeconomy museum” and a “forest knowledge school.”

Damião Barborsa in his nursery in the community of Xadá, Pará. Photo: Flavio Forner/ASL Brazil/CC BY NC
Damião Barborsa in his nursery in the community of Xadá, Pará. Photo: Flavio Forner/ASL Brazil/CC BY NC

According to the secretary, some of the first financing for these initiatives may come from the Inter-American Development Bank, which will provide USD 300 million for the state’s climate and decarbonization efforts. The first installment is expected to be paid in October, though the amount specifically allocated to the PlanBio has yet to be defined.

State government plays both sides

Despite the greener turn signaled in recent announcements, agribusiness will likely remain a key industry and vital source of income for Pará and its government — and a possible source of tension with its bold bioeconomy ambitions.

In 2022, the state’s agricultural exports reached a value of USD 3 billion, a 70 percent increase from the previous year. The main commodities were soybeans, beef, and forest products such as wood, charcoal, and paper.

According to Agriculture Ministry data, China was the main international destination for Pará agribusiness, followed by the U.S., the Netherlands, and Spain. The Asian nation accounted for USD 957 million of exports — a third of the total — with meat and soybeans representing 92 percent of this value.

In April, Governor Barbalho joined Lula during the president’s state visit to China, where an agreement was reached over constructing a railway connecting south-east Pará to the port of Barcarena, on the state’s north coast. The project, set to be built by China Communications Construction Company (CCCC), will help transport commodities to international markets, including China, and will see an estimated investment of BRL 7 billion.

Meanwhile, cattle ranching businesses in the state received almost BRL 210 million in tax waivers in 2021. But the activity, Mr. Leitão says, “receives a lot and offers little in terms of productivity and efficiency from an environmental standpoint.”

In 2021, 85 percent of greenhouse gas emissions in Pará came from land use change, mainly deforestation driven by agricultural expansion, with 11 percent coming directly from farming and livestock activities themselves, according to data from the Climate Observatory, a Brazilian network of environmental organizations.  

Altamira, also in Pará, and São Félix do Xingu are the municipalities with the highest greenhouse gas emissions in the whole country.

Altamira is also home to the Riozinho do Anfrísio Extractive Reserve, a protected sustainable production area that is part of the territory of the Indigenous Xingu people. Just like the fruit pulp producers in São Félix do Xingu, the workers of Riozinho do Anfrísio are under pressure from the advance of deforestation.

Expanding land clearance towards the reserve, where Brazil nut, copaiba oil, and rubber are harvested, has become a major concern for Pedro Pereira, one of its residents. But in recent months, he has noticed a decrease in the number of invasions of the territory, possibly due to the efforts of the new Lula government to resume the fight against environmental crimes. 

In April, Mr. Barbalho and Marina Silva, Brazil’s environment minister, signed a cooperation agreement to improve environmental enforcement, forest management, and land use in Pará.

pará In the Xingu territory, almost a thousand producers have generated US$1.9 million through the trade of their bio-products since 2016. Photo: Rafael Salazar/Origins Brazil
In the Xingu territory, almost a thousand producers have generated US$1.9 million through the trade of their bio-products since 2016. Photo: Rafael Salazar/Origins Brazil

The producers of Riozinho do Anfrísio have shown that it is possible to generate income while keeping the forest standing. With the support of Origins Brazil — a network coordinated by Imaflora and the NGO Instituto Socioambiental (ISA) that encourages sustainable businesses in the Amazon — they have negotiated improved terms with companies that buy their products. Not only do they obtain fairer prices, but the companies also cover the logistical costs of the business.

“Before, rubber went for 70 centavos [USD 0.14] a block, and today it is BRL 13, a huge change, and with a contract that gives us security,” Mr. Pereira says.

In the Xingu territory, Origins Brazil has almost a thousand registered producers, who, since 2016, have collectively generated BRL 9.5 million through the trade of their bio-products. In 2022 alone, revenue was BRL 2 million.

But this revenue from the bioeconomy could be much higher, according to a recent study by the Escolhas Institute, which assessed the possible income from the recovery of degraded areas and, therefore, the planting of native species that could be exploited by producers.

Their research estimated that the reforestation of 6 million hectares — an area roughly the size of Croatia — could create one million direct jobs, generate BRL 13.6 billion in revenue, and reduce the poverty index in Pará by 50 percent. The jobs would be created by labor in seed collection, seedling production, planting, maintenance, and activity monitoring.

According to the institute’s Sérgio Leitão, a much-discussed bottleneck for the bioeconomy is the low level of productivity. But he points out that replanting forests together with other activities of lesser impact, such as horticulture produced by family agriculture, could expand its reach. 

“This creates a space for jobs, income generation, and fighting poverty, and the necessary time for the scale of other activities to appear,” Mr. Leitão explains.

Mr. Pereira is also excited about the prospects. His main challenge now is not the invaders, but the expansion of his production. He hopes that his community will be able to negotiate with more companies to sell surplus production. But, for him, preserving the environment goes beyond an income opportunity.

“The forest is everything to us,” says Mr. Pereira. “It’s where we get our family’s sustenance from, all our food, our money. It is the source of water. Without the forest, we are nobody.”

Originally published by Diálogo Chino.