In Rondonia, Brazil, a judge has ruled that several beef slaughterhouses are guilty of purchasing cattle from a protected area of former rainforest in the Amazon. The judge has also ordered the slaughterhouses and three cattle ranchers to collectively pay $764,000 for the environmental harm caused. Funds will be used to reforest 573 acres of area pasture.
The ruling is part of a collection of legal cases seeking millions of dollars in environmental damages from the slaughterhouses. These plants are accused of selling cattle raised illegally in Jaci-Parana, a protected region where a once thriving rainforest was destroyed to create pastureland. Despite Brazil’s law against raising commercial cattle in a protected area, about 210,000 cattle are now grazed in Jaci-Parana according to the state animal division.
With almost 80% of its forest destroyed, it’s the most damaged conservation unit in the Brazilian Amazon. Legal papers say the damage is about $1 billion. Additionally, the Associated Press reveals that cattle from protected areas were sent directly to slaughterhouses, and unauthorized ranchers completed records.
Why should the United States care?
In recent years, the United States has emerged as a major importer of Brazilian beef. As of 2024, Brazil is the third-ranked country for imported fresh beef passed for entry in the United States.
The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) states on their website that cattle ranching is the “number one culprit of deforestation” in “virtually every Amazon country.” In fact, 70% of Amazon deforestation is attributable to cattle ranching. WWF also writes that cattle pastures increase fire risk and contaminate local ecosystems. In spite of all this, cattle ranching in the Amazon is expanding.
The global food system accounts for about one-third of all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions, and animal agriculture is a major part of the problem. Because farmers must clear countless acres of land to graze cattle and grow feed crops, animal agriculture is a huge driver of deforestation. It is also a leading source of methane, a greenhouse gas that can trap 28 times more heat than carbon dioxide over a 100-year period.
Animal agriculture is destroying our planet, worsening the climate crisis, and causing suffering to people and animals alike. But transforming our food system—and shifting toward more plant-based food in particular—can be a powerful solution for reducing global emissions, decreasing deforestation, and safeguarding our world for future generations. Help be the change and start exploring plant-based eating today!