Brazil: Veracel’s deceitful
practices
The Veracel pulp mill is located
in the south of the Brazilian state of Bahia, some 45 kilometres
from the coast, on the border between the municipalities of Eunapolis
and Belmonte. Veracel is a corporation in which the Swedish-Finnish
group Stora Enso and the Brazilian Aracruz group have equal shares,
today managing one of the world’s largest eucalyptus plantation
and industrialization projects.
As from the end of the eighties,
gigantic monoculture tree plantations and pulp mills started to
be set up in the Southern Cone of South America, occupying vast
stretches of land in Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Brazil. This
is the implementation of a strategic decision taken by the main
timber and paper market groups from Sweden, Finland, Spain, the
United States, Brazil and Chile.
While dozens of factories that
had been producing 100, 200 and 300 thousand tons of pulp per
year were being closed down in the North, mills producing a million
tons per year were being set up in the South, with their corresponding
plantations, invading vast areas of native ecosystems and other
land formerly used for traditional farming in the region and causing
the consequent social impacts.
An example of this model and
its negative social and environmental impacts are the Veracel
plantations and pulp mill. The plantations were started in 1991
and the pulp mill in September 2005. One hundred and sixty four
thousand hectares belonging to Veracel and another similar area
contracted with local farmers are given over to massive eucalyptus
plantations in order to feed a pulp production amounting to 900,000
tons per year.
On launching its activities
through costly advertising campaigns, Veracel committed itself
to preserve the Mata Atlântica forest, affirming that its plantations
were ecologically sustainable, that it would provide tens of thousands
of jobs and implement major social works. However, as the project
advanced the promises became fewer and fewer and presently they
do not correspond to the actual situation.
The scope and speed of the
expansion of this monoculture plantation generated considerable
changes in the living conditions in the area. Between 1991 and
2002 rural migration reached 59.4 per cent and small farmers disappeared.
Some of those evicted decided to struggle for their right to a
plot of land while others moved to the nearest large city, Eunápolis,
which has some 100,000 inhabitants.
In 2005 after serious conflicts
with the police and armed bands, 515 families organized by the
Movement of the Landless (MST) achieved their objective but some
1570 other families lodging in camps set up along the highways
in the area continue to demand land. In the meanwhile those
who went to the city were unable to find employment and are now
part of the rising urban social emergency.
"Here we have the refuse
produced by the presence of Veracel. What has most increased is
criminality, child prostitution, poverty, hunger, the number of
people imprisoned, robberies, murders,” affirms Jodenilton Bastos,
a journalist who constantly receives requests for food and clothing
for the unemployed through two daily programmes on the Eunapolis
Rádio Ativa.
The promises of employment
and welfare made by Veracel underwent a progressive reduction
as time went by. They started by announcing the creation of 40,000
jobs, this figure later dropped to 20,000, then to 10,000 in the
mill and 3,000 in rural tasks. Now the mill employs some 300 workers,
mostly from outside the region as they cannot find specialized
workers in the area.
The state of social emergency
in the region is that of extreme hunger. The SOS Vida home in
Eunapolis, directed by Sister Terezinha Biase cares for up to
50 children. "They arrive here weighing 50 to 60 percent
less than normal. They stay here from three to eight months, until
their lives are no longer at risk”, she explained. The home
relies on voluntary donations as it receives no economic assistance
either from the public sector or from private companies.
The situation in Eunápolis
is becoming more serious because Veracel is abandoning programmes
for direct assistance to the population. A project for a soup
kitchen and educational care for 100 children from a poor neighbourhood
was closed by the company after it had used it to obtain financial
endorsement. The parents of the children denounced that Veracel
dressed them especially to receive visitors from abroad and take
their photos.
Something similar happened
with the preservation of the Mata Atlântica forest, the sustainability
of monoculture eucalyptus plantations and non-contamination of
water courses and air from the pulp mill. The Promoters (Public
Prosecutors) of the Public Ministry of Eunapolis have launched
various court cases against Veracel but Justice is slow and the
public powers act in complicity with the company.
João Alves Da Silva Neto, Public
Prosecutor for Eunápolis told us that "Our legal system is
one of the slowest. They take advantage of this slowness and implement
their action,” referring to Veracel. "They use corrupt practices.
The executive and legislative are in the hands of economic powers
that exert more and more pressure to increase the plantations.”
In 1993, the Public Prosecutor
for the Republic accepted civil action against Veracruz, a predecessor
of Veracel, for felling hundreds of hectares of Mata Atlântica
forest. The company did not halt its activities and started occupying
traditional farming areas, planting beyond the limits established
by local legislation. The law is simply ignored or changed in
agreement with the municipal or state government.
For some years now, various
civil bodies in the area have been complaining about the irregular
activities of plantation and pulp mill companies. In 2005, following
a public hearing, the Public Prosecutor demanded that Veracel
remove its plantations over a radius of 10 kilometres in the buffer
zones of the National Park Conservation Units, in accordance with
Brazilian legal requirements.
According to agronomist Mónica
Leite, a specialist in fruit-growing, this region "was very
prosperous, it had a good rainfall and a certain balance, there
was a lot of forest. My father was a farmer, he planted a lot
(…) and there were no diseases. Fifteen years ago fruit growing
here was marvellous; there were enormous plantations of papaya,
graviola and guava. But all this is ending with the arrival of
Veracel".
The small cattle-farmer, José
Marinho Damaceno suffers from the consequences of the discharge
of Veracel effluents opposite his house, on the other side of
the Jequitinhonha River. The strong smell of rotten cabbage gives
him headaches and irritated eyes and each time it happens he has
to abandon his farm. Damaceno knows that sooner or later he will
have to leave his land definitively and sell it as best he can.
The typical fish of the Jequitinhonha
River, the snook, has practically disappeared. As a remedy, Veracel
introduced another fish, the pintado that further pushed the snook
to extinction and is itself also disappearing. Civil bodies have
stated their concern over the pulp mill’s emissions, which is
apparently using ECF bleaching technology, but no data is available
– it is the company itself that carries out its own monitoring.
Source: Research carried out
in situ by the Uruguayan journalist Victor L. Bacchetta (vbacchet@internet.com.uy)
with the support of the Centro de Estudos e Pesquisas para o Desenvolvimento
do Extremo Sul da Bahía (CEPEDES) which has been carrying out
activities in the city of Eunápolis since 1991. A full version
of this report -in Spanish- is available
at:
http://www.guayubira.org.uy/celulosa/Veracel.html