9 June 2009 | Interviews | Forests and biodiversity | Climate Justice and Energy
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The eucalyptus plantations begun to expans in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, in the 70s, with two main goals: the production of vegetal coal for siderurgical corporations and to supply pulp mills.
The model was installed based on tax incentives, but its social effects have been devastating. The peasant, indigenous and quilombola communities (of black slave descent) have remained isolated, surrounded by the eucalyptus plantations.
Rural migration to urban centers is increasing. The water streams have dried out and the process of land concentration is nonstop.
To know better this complex situation, Real World Radio interviewed Enio Bohnenberger and Cristiano Meirelles, from the Rural Landless Peasant Movement (MST) of Minas Gerais.
Meirelles, who lives in the mining town of Montes Claros, said that area of Brazil is not famous for its great technological development. He explained the backbone of its economy has always been linked with cattle growing. Nowadays most of the families working in the coal industry, work in inhumane conditions.
Besides, he complained that family farming does not have the government’s support and that the expansion of the eucalyptus monoculture had caused serious social impacts on different levels.
Bohnenberger agreed that the Brazilian state promotes this unsustainable model through tax benefits and the granting of environmental licenses. “Besides funding, the state guarantees that nothing will happen to these corporations”, he added.
This is an economic model that’s totally dependent on the international economy and the latest financial crisis proves that. According to the MST, since the beginning of the economic crisis, late last year, nearly 200,000 Brazilians have lost their jobs in the mining, pulp, and siderurgy sectors.
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