BRASILIA (Reuters) – Brazil’s environmental safety company IBAMA has imposed 365 million reais ($64 million) in fines on cattle ranches and meat packers, together with the world’s largest JBS SA (OTC:), for elevating or shopping for cattle on illegally deforested land within the Amazon (NASDAQ:).
IBAMA stated on it had recognized 69 properties that had bought 18,000 head of cattle raised on deforested land, and 23 meat packing firms that purchased the cattle within the states of Para and Amazonas.
The enforcement operation was geared toward curbing deforestation within the Amazon by monitoring the chain that produces or sells cattle from illegally deforested areas, IBAMA stated.
JBS denied shopping for cattle from the properties named by IBAMA.
“Not one of the JBS purchases indicated by IBAMA have been constituted of embargoed areas,” the corporate stated.
JBS added in a press release that its geospatial monitoring system ensures the corporate doesn’t purchase animals from farms concerned in unlawful deforestation, the invasion of indigenous lands or environmental conservation areas.
Intensive cattle ranching together with clearing land to promote timber or develop soy are driving deforestation within the Amazon rainforest.
Various meat packers signed commitments with prosecutors in 2013, agreeing to not purchase cattle from ranches that have been cleared illegally or have been blacklisted for environmental crimes.
JBS and greater than a dozen different main agriculture companies have additionally pledged to eradicate deforestation from their provide chains by 2025, together with destruction linked to oblique suppliers that promote to middlemen who then promote to meat packers.