guardian.co.uk,
Erin Hale, Thursday 17 May 2012
![]() |
| Pig iron blast furnaces in Pará state, Brazil, contribute to deforestation in the Amazon. Photograph: Rodrigo Baléia/Greenpeace |
Ford, GM
and BMW are sourcing material from Brazil that is driving illegal logging and
slave labour, according to campaigners at Greenpeace.
Brazil is a
major exporter of pig iron, a primary ingredient of steel and cast iron, that
is produced using massive quantities of charcoal.
Reports
over the past decade from the Brazilian government, the International Labour Organisation (ILO), and the US Department of Labour have indicated that
charcoal used by many pig iron suppliers in the Amazonian state of Pará was
obtained through forced labour and illegal logging of protected and indigenous
lands.
A new report by Greenpeace uses customs data to link eight international companies to
two major Brazilian exporters of pig iron, Viena Siderurgica do Maranhão
(Viena) and Siderúrgica do Pará (Sidepar), that the green group says are linked
through the supply chain to charcoal suppliers with histories of buying from
illegal camps and concealing illicit behaviour.
Ford,
General Motors, BMW, Mercedes, Nissan are all linked through a Severstal steel
mill in Columbus, Mississippi, that buys from Viena and Severstal, while John
Deere and ThyssonKrupp are linked through foundries supplied by the
Illinois-based National Material Trading, a metal broker that sources from
Viena. Two other metal brokers, Environmental Materials Corporation in
Pennsylvania and a division of Cargill in Minnesota were also said by
Greenpeace to have imported pig iron from Viena.
"By
buying this steel, these well-known brands are helping to destroy the
Amazon," said Greenpeace Brazil Amazon campaign director Paulo Adario in a
statement. "President Dilma [Rousseff] must protect the Amazon and the
people who depend on it by ending deforestation, slavery and the invasion of
indigenous lands."
Greenpeace
said it hopes to raise awareness of deforestation and slave labour in the
Amazon as the world's leaders descend on Brazil next month for the Rio+20 Earth summit.
Bloomberg
broke a major story in 2006 on US car makers' supply chains being linked to
slave charcoal camps, but Greenpeace claims that despite promises from high
profile American and European companies such as BMW and General Motors (GM),
many continue to buy directly or indirectly from illicit companies.
Ford, GM
and Nissan were all named in the original Bloomberg story.
In response
to the report, GM stated it has a "zero tolerance" policy against
employee abuse and corrupt business practices. A BMW spokesman said the company
ensured suppliers "meet the same environmental and social standards we
have set ourselves when they become our business partners" but ensuring
sub-suppliers did so was a challenge. .
Ford was
the most forthcoming and indicated that it has been working with the ILO and
Brazilian government, and has been training suppliers on labour codes since
2006 and sub-tier suppliers since 2011.
Todd
Nissen, of Ford Corporate Communications, said: "We are very familiar with
the pig iron situation in Brazil. We were first made aware in 2006 that
charcoal produced there with the use of slave labour was in our supply chain.
We immediately stopped sourcing from the site identified in the 2006
investigation and took steps to work with our supply chain to safeguard human
rights throughout their operations. Last year, we renewed our inquiry into the
potential points of entry for Brazilian pig iron in our supply chain and are
evaluating supplier progress to ensure responsible procurement of the
material."
The
grittier details in the Greenpeace report linking Viena and Sidepar with the
charcoal suppliers and their alleged illicit activities are cited as
confidential to protect the report's sources. Activists battling illegal
logging in the Amazon are frequently targeted for their actions.
The
Brazilian charcoal industry has a well-documented history of destructive
environmental practices and human rights abuse.
An ILO
report indicates that in 2008, there were as many as 40,000 slave labourers in
Brazil. About 1,200 were working in the charcoal industry, while 5,600 were
working in the related industry of deforestation and forestry. The Brazilian
government has attempted to tackle slave labour in the charcoal industry by
establishing the Citizen's Charcoal Institute (ICC) in 2004 to monitor the
industry. Greenpeace claims there are no consequences for noncompliance, rendering
the ICC moot, though the organisation has helped to rehabilitate at least 161
former slaves.
Related Article:

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.