The
Dark Side of Agrofuels: Horror in the "Brazilian California"
Raúl Zibechi | July 23, 2007
Source: Programa de
las Américas - www.ircamericas.org
Brazil is staking
its claim as a great emerging power thanks to the leadership it
maintains in biofuel production. The price of this ambition is
paid by the environment and by the cane cutters, who are the invisible
characters in this story.
"When the
airplane passed, pouring out that bath of poison, my father was
soaked. He fell ill because of the toxins that are sprayed over
the cane. This is the end for many young people here, " says
a female cane cutter from the region of Ribeirao Preto, in São
Paulo state.
"The people
work and they give them a slip of paper to shop with in the supermarket.
The people don't see money, just the bill of what they owe,"
confirms a worker from the same region, where seven of every 10
cane cutters did not finish primary school.1
Other cutters
explain that they are cheated by the scales that the bosses control—they
calculate that they have to carry 110 kilograms for the scale
to reach 100. Almost all of them were lured from Brazil's poorer
Northeast by promises that they would earn very high salaries.
Many moderate analysts see working conditions as reminiscent of
slavery. But the president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva,
said before the G-8 Summit that biofuels have "enormous potential
to generate jobs and income" and that "they offer a
real option for sustainable development."2
Behind the "politically
correct" jargon lurks a reality poised to destroy the Amazon,
a reality that destroys millions of young bodies and promises
lucrative business to investors. The very name biofuels seems
to be destined to foment the confusion. João Pedro Stédile,
head of the Brazilian Landless Workers' Movement (MST), points
out that the defenders of ethanol "use the prefix bio to
make it seem like it's a good thing," and that because of
this its opponents prefer to call it like it is and use the term
"agrofuels" because the term refers to agriculturally
produced energy.3
Backtracking
Four Centuries
According to the ex-governor of São Paulo state, Claudio
Lembo, agrofuels will spread monoculture farming across the whole
country. Although he is a conservative politician and member of
the Liberal Front Party (now the Democratic Party), he thinks
that Brazil "backtracked 500 years to the same place"
as it was as a Portuguese colony. In his opinion, agricultural
land will be lost when used for sugarcane and the history of those
four centuries will be repeated, when "thousands were expelled
from their communities by the leviathan of monoculture, which
creates concentrated wealth."4
Looking closer
at the cane cutters' working conditions, a terrifying world appears—a
world that should give people who are enthused by the idea of
substituting fossil fuels with agrofuels something to think about.
According to various reports, around a million people work in
the industry, of which 500,000 are in the agricultural sector.
Close to 80% of cane harvesting is manual. The workers only get
paid if they reach the output set by the bosses, which in the
Ribeirao Preto region is some 12 tons a day, double the 1980 target.
If they don't reach it, they aren't paid at all.5
To reach this
output target they must work some 10 or 12 hours a day, but sometimes
14, many of these under the burning sun. Many parents bring their
small children to help them reach the production goal. Although
the numbers of working children have declined, in 1993 one in
every four cane cutters in the state of Pernambuco was between
seven and 17 years old, and many did not receive any salary. In
the last two harvests, 14 people died as a result of excess work.
The cutters are recruited in other regions and have to live in
the same hacienda, in mattress-less cabins, with neither water
nor a kitchen; they have to cook in tins over little bonfires
and buy their groceries in the same hacienda at prices exceeding
market values.
The cane is cut
after being burned, which facilitates harvesting but gravely endangers
the environment and produces serious respiratory complaints.
In the Piracicaba
municipality, in São Paulo, hospitalizations of children
with respiratory problems increase 21% during periods of cane
burning. For every 10 tons, the cutter must make 72,000 machete
blows and flex their legs 36,000 times. They lose around 10 liters
of water per day and walk 10 km a day while they complete their
job. The monthly salary ranges from US$150-200 a month. According
to the sociologist Francisco de Oliveira, the cutters' average
lifespan is less than that of colonial slaves.6
The minister
of Work, Carlos Lupi, admitted before the International Labor
Conference in Geneva that part of the production of cane in Brazil
is done with degrading work in awful conditions: "They work
without protection and even lose fingers."7 Maria Aparecida
de Moraes Silva, who has studied the work on sugarcane plantations
for 30 years now, affirms that 45% of the cutters come from the
Northeast. The migrants are preferred by employers because while
far from their families they tolerate the abuses unquestioningly,
and after the seven-month-long harvest they return to their villages,
making it difficult for them to organize unions.8
They
Call This Progress
Little by little harvesting machines are being introduced that
do the work of a hundred people. As a result, the plantation owners
have raised the cutters' productivity targets. They order them
to cut the cane closer to the ground, as the machines do. The
result is that they now choose younger and younger workers who
receive one dollar per ton.
The economic
journal Jornal do Valor explains how people fall into servitude:
"There is a manpower middleman who covers the poorer states,
especially in the North and the Northeast. He chooses the youngest
ones. When they get on the bus to go to the city where they are
contracted, the cutters get in to their first debt, for the transportation.
The middleman earns 60 reales (US$30) for every worker that he
takes. It is not unusual for him also to be responsible for the
sale of the first goods that the workers need. He becomes the
'owner' of this manpower through the accumulation of debt."9
The expansion
of cane cultivation destroys the social fabric. In the region
of the small city of Delta, in Minas Gerais state, 300,000 hectares
have been planted in the last four years. The city has 5,000 inhabitants
that swell to 10,000 during the harvest. According to a report
by the newspaper Correio Braziliense the small city has begun
to register homicide rates that were unimaginable before the multiplication
of the cane farms. Many female children and young people are kidnapped
to boost prostitution in the region, where 20,000 cutters arrive
a year. The cutters overflow at the edges of small cities where
alcoholism and the consumption of crack proliferate.
The expansion
and modernization of the cane industry inundates towns and municipalities.
José Eustaquio da Silva, mayor of Delta, has recognized
that "the municipality is close to collapse. The health facilities,
hospitals, and schools are packed, and the worst thing is that
along with the workers come all sorts of people and bandits."
In Delta there isn't a single hotel but there are 27 brothels.
Journalists have discovered that various public figures of the
county are involved in the trafficking of minors and in cases
of pedophilia with the children of cane-cutters. The middlemen
(who are nicknamed "gatos" or cats) carry arms and impose
their rules.
Stédile
always uses the same example to illustrate the social problems
generated by mono-crop farming. "The municipality of Ribeirao
Preto in the center of São Paulo is considered the 'Brazilian
California' due to its high level of technological development
in the cane industry. Thirty years ago, this city produced all
its food, had a peasantry in the interior and, in fact, it was
a rich region with equitable income distribution. Now it is an
immense sugar plantation, with some 30 sugar mills controlling
all the land. In the city, 100,000 people live in slums (out of
the 540,000 inhabitants of the municipality). The prison population
is at 3,813 people—counting only the adults—while
the population living from and working in agriculture is just
2,412 people, including the children. This is the cane monoculture
model of society. There are more people in jail than there are
dedicated to agriculture!"10
In the 2007 sugar
harvest another technological "advance" will come about:
for the first time, genetically modified cane will be harvested.
It is lighter and holds less water, meaning it will bring large
profits to the investors. But the workers will have to cut three
times as much to reach 10 tons.
In this region,
the owners lay off a large number of workers at frequent intervals,
in order to keep the best. These are the so-called "productivity
champions" who can cut up to 20 tons a day, with a monthly
average of 12 to 17 tons a day.11 With the workers suffering from
seizures, cramps, spinal pain, and tendonitis on top of frequent
cuts, the owners found a "technical solution." The sugar
mills distribute a free electrolyte and vitamin supplement, intended
for athletes or workers with intense physical activity. At many
mills the cutters drink this product before starting work. "Physical
pain disappears, the cramps die down, and productivity increases,"
says Pereira Novaes. The problem is that they need to increase
the dose every month.
"With supplements
and medicines you can keep up the high productivity demanded by
the cane. The strongest survive, like in a process of 'natural
selection.' But the question is: how and for how long do they
survive? Solutions and medicines can be seen as an expression
of the paradox of a certain type of modernization and expansion
of cane cultivation; it consumes the labor force that makes it
flourish," insists Pereira Novaes. There are no official
figures but it is certain that there are many young workers who
retire due to disability, and dozens of deaths due to exhaustion
in the "Brazilian California."
The Big
Winners
In Brazil, cane production began in 1550, but has expanded greatly
since 1970, fueled by the rise in oil prices. The forest of the
Atlantic coast was halved, the area most affected by this expansion,
but now the cane fields advance toward the center and West, where
it is predicted that the rich ecosystem of the Cerrados will disappear
by 2030 at the hands of monoculture. In the next seven years Brazil
will double its production of ethanol and may produce almost 50%
more sugar cane, which means building another 100 mills by 2010.
It doesn't stop
there. The Brazilian National Economic and Social Development
Bank (BNDES) aims for Brazil to control 50% of the global ethanol
market. This implies increasing the current 17 billion to 110
billion liters a year, for which it will be necessary to plant
some 80 million hectares. That is, destroy the Amazon. The government
has adopted this sector as its principal development strategy.
BNDES, which has more resources than any other regional bank including
the Inter-American Development Bank, estimates that it will invest
six billion dollars in sugar mills and cane plantations.
But Brazil wants
to expand agrofuels across the whole region. The immediate plans
consist of taking production to countries in Central America and
the Caribbean that already signed free trade agreements with the
United States (such as CAFTA), to avoid Washington's import tariffs.
"The objective is to export the nearly completed product
to those countries," says the magazine Peripecias, "finish
the process in those nations, and from there enter the U.S. market."
The Brazilian bank finances the investments in those countries,
but is also negotiating a share of up to 30% of stocks in the
Central American projects.
In Stédile's
opinion, three big sectors come together in the ethanol project:
"The oil companies (who want to reduce dependence on oil),
the agro-businesses (like Bunge, Cargill, and Monsanto) who want
to keep their monopoly in the global agricultural products markets,"
and now the transnational capital that makes "an alliance
with the proprietors of land in the South, and especially in Brazil,
to use large areas of land for the production of agrofuels."12
The future is
not encouraging. Instead of pressure to modify the patterns of
consumption and the energy matrix especially in transportation,
the big investors like George Soros and corporations like Cargill
are positioning themselves in the Brazilian production of ethanol
to increase their profits. Neither global warming nor the cane
cutters' working conditions cross their minds.
End Notes
Testimonies collected by the Comisión Pastoral da Terra
and reproduced by Núcleo Amigos da Terra Brasil, p. 15.
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, ob. cit.
Carlos Vicente, ob. cit.
Estado de São Paulo, 13 March 2007, on www.estadao.com.br.
All figures from a study by Núcleo de Amigos da Terra Brasil.
Francisco de Oliveira, in Folha de São Paulo, 27 May 2007.
O Estado de São Paulo, 11 June 2007.
Maria Aparecida de Moraes Silva, interview in Instituto Humanitas
Unisinos magazine on www.unisinos.br.
Jornal do Valor, Sao Paulo, 17 May 2007.
Carlos Vicente, ob. cit.
José Roberto Pereira Novaes, ob. cit
Carlos Vicente, ob. cit.
Sources
Carlos Vicente,
"El cultivo de agrocombustibles solo interesa al capital
transnacional", interviewed by Joao Pedro Stédile,
Biodiversidad magazine.
José Roberto
Pereira Novaes, "Campeoes de produtividade: dores e febres
nos canaviais paulistas", 11 June 2007 on www.pastoraldomigrante.com.br.
Luiz Inácio
Lula da Silva, "Desafíos para la cumbre del G-8",
La Jornada.
Maria Aparecida
de Moraes Silva, interviewed in Instituto Humanitas Unisinos magazine
on www.unisinos.br.
Núcleo
Amigos da Terra Brasil, "Agronegocio e biocombustiveis: uma
mistura explosive", 2006, www.natbrasil.org.br.
Paola Visca,
"El combustible de los biocombustibles", in Peripecias,
23 de mayo de 2007.
Pastoral do Migrante:
www.pastoraldomigrante.br.