A
Green Desert in the South of Latin America
Imagine an area the size of 500,000 football
fields planted with a single species of tree. Is it a forest? No,
it is a green desert: no people, no water, no other plants. A few
years from now, this will be the landscape in Rio Grande do Sul,
Brazil’s southernmost state, where three companies are concentrating
pulp production, leading to significant social and environmental
damages.
The state of Rio Grande do Sul, like Uruguay
to the south and Argentina to the west, forms part of an ecosystem
known as the Pampas: fertile lowlands with a unique biodiversity
encompassing hundreds of birds and mammals found nowhere else on
earth. The subsoil of this region contains one of the largest freshwater
reserves in South America.
And it is precisely because of these characteristics
that this region was chosen by the Swedish-Finnish pulp and paper
company Stora Enso for its pulp production operations. Eucalyptus
trees, the raw material for pulp, can be harvested seven years after
planting in Brazil. In Scandinavia, a tree planted for pulp production
would need at least 50 years to reach the stage when it could be
harvested for manufacturing paper.
There are three companies that control
tree plantation and pulp production activity in Rio Grande do Sul,
although in practice, they are essentially one and the same. Besides
Stora Enso, the other two companies are Aracruz Celulose and Votorantim
Celulose e Papel (VCP). But Stora Enso and Aracruz are co-owners
of the joint venture Veracel, and VCP is a shareholder in Aracruz,
as well as a partner of Stora Enso in another joint venture, Aracel.
With the further incentive of tax breaks
granted by the Brazilian government, these companies bought up thousands
of hectares of land, forcing small farmers and their families out
of the region. In northern Brazil, in the state of Espirito Santo,
Aracruz had already driven numerous indigenous communities off their
territories and stolen 10,000 hectares of land.
The purchase of land in Rio Grande do
Sul is also a violation of Brazilian law, which prohibits foreign
companies from buying land in border areas. For this reason, Stora
Enso created a ghost company, purportedly Brazilian-owned, to purchase
land on its behalf.
In the towns and cities where these companies
have set up operations, they have blatantly violated the rights
of workers. Men, women and teenagers harvest trees on the plantations
with no protective equipment. To avoid paying social security contributions,
the companies fire workers after three months, then rehire them
at a lower salary.
In addition to social impacts, monoculture
tree plantations for pulp production also cause serious environmental
impacts. In Uruguay, where the Finnish company Botnia and the Spanish
company ENCE own 360,000 hectares of land, dedicated to eucalyptus
plantations, water shortages have already hit the areas where they
are operating. This is only natural, since it is estimated that
a eucalyptus tree consumes 20 litres of water a day. According to
Science magazine (23 December 2005), eucalyptus plantations in the
Argentine pampas have reduced the flow of water by 52% and dried
up 13% of the rivers.
In Rio Grande do Sul, according to researchers
at the Federal University, the eucalyptus plantations will consume
20% more water than the average volume of rainfall in the state.
In addition to drying out water sources and causing desertification,
eucalyptus trees also increase the acidity of the soil. One can
only imagine what the consequences will be for the 3,000 species
of plants in the Pampas ecosystem.
Moreover, these companies do not even
have to pay taxes, since 97% the pulp produced by their mills is
for export. When neoliberalism was at its peak, the Brazilian government
created a law that exempts exported goods from taxes.
Until 2006, these companies pursued their
goals in silence, relatively ignored by society at large. But the
silence was broken on 8 March of that year by a group of women from
Via Campesina, who demonstrated their opposition by occupying a
eucalyptus plantation in Rio Grande do Sul. The following year the
women returned, and this time they occupied eucalyptus plantations
in other areas as well.
In 2008, once again on 8 March – International
Women’s Day – the women staged another protest and denounced the
illegal purchase of land by Stora Enso. The response was swift and
violent.
The Stora Enso plantation the women had
occupied was cordoned off by the police, which prevented journalists
from entering to document the events. The 900 peasant women protestors
were attacked by the police with tear gas and pepper spray. No doctors
or lawyers were allowed to enter. The women were forced to remain
lying on the ground with guns pointed at their heads for hours.
They were only allowed to eat after being held for 12 hours.
But the story does not end there. With
their first protest, these peasant women alerted the Brazilian public
to the dangers posed by monoculture plantations and pulp mills.
Their continued efforts have served to promote greater coordination
among peasant and environmentalist movements throughout South America.
Just as capital has no borders, these Brazilian women have taught
us that our struggle must have no borders either.
By Miguel Enrique Stédile,
Movimento Sem Terra and Via Campesina, Brazil.