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Illegal deforestation in Mato Grosso: how loopholes in implementing Brazil’s Forest Code endanger the soy sector

The article examines how loopholes in the implementation of Brazil’s Forest Code enable illegal deforestation in Mato Grosso’s soy sector and highlights the need for full compliance to curb deforestation and strengthen Brazil’s position as a sustainable commodity supplier.

Mairon G. Bastos Lima / Published on 11 February 2025

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Citation

Carvalho, R., Rausch, L., Gibbs, H.K., Bastos Lima, M.G., Bernasconi, P., Valdiones, A.P., Vasconcelos, A., & Silgueiro, V. (2024). Illegal deforestation in Mato Grosso: how loopholes in implementing Brazil’s forest code endanger the soy sector. Land 13(11), 1828. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13111828

Forest trees and agriculture field land

Drone panoramic aerial view of illegal amazon deforestation, Mato Grosso, Brazil.

Photo: Paralaxis / Getty Images

Brazil’s Forest Code (FC) is a landmark law that, despite dating back to the 1930s, has low compliance. Illegal deforestation continues, and millions of hectares that were set to be reforested remain degraded. Although sector agreements such as the Amazon Soy Moratorium (ASM) have been important in the fight against deforestation, the implementation of the FC represents the key long-term strategy to halt deforestation in the soy supply chain. In this article, the authors used datasets of the boundaries of rural properties, deforestation permits, environmental licensing, and land cover in Mato Grosso to quantify illegal deforestation and analyzed compliance with the Forest Code (FC) on soy farms to explore how loopholes in the implementation of the FC allow deforestation to continue unabated. Their analyses show that between August 2009 and July 2019, soy farms in Mato Grosso State, the largest Brazilian soy producer, were responsible for 15% (or 468.1 thousand hectares) of all land cleared in registered properties. Half of this deforestation was illegal. The FC implementation within these properties has been slow: only 11% of registered soy farms have made it to the final stage of the registration process, thus being considered fully compliant. This novel analysis reinforces that accelerating the implementation of the FC could significantly reduce deforestation and advance the restoration of illegally cleared land particularly in the Cerrado, where 50% of the original cover has already been lost, as well as in the Amazon. By achieving full compliance in the soy sector, Brazil’s position in the international market would be strengthened as a supplier of sustainably produced, deforestation-free commodities.

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SEI author

Mairon G. Bastos Lima
Mairon G. Bastos Lima

Senior Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters

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Topics and subtopics
Land : Forests, Food and agriculture / Economy : Supply chains
Related centres
SEI Headquarters
Regions
Brazil