Free Trial

What Brazil’s soy moratorium fight means — and what happens next

Highway BR-163 stretches between the Tapajos National Forest, left, and a soy field in Belterra, Para state, Brazil, on Nov. 25, 2019. (AP Photo/Leo Correa, File)

Key Points

  • The Brazilian government is currently facing a challenge regarding the soy moratorium, which was designed to curb deforestation in the Amazon by preventing soy purchases from deforested lands.
  • A federal judge has temporarily upheld the moratorium while it undergoes review, but the future of the agreement is uncertain amid pressures from agribusiness interests claiming competition restrictions.
  • Environmentalists warn that weakening or dismantling the moratorium could exacerbate deforestation in the Amazon, reversing years of progress and jeopardizing Brazil's access to environmentally conscious markets.
  • The outcome of the case may lead to modifications of the moratorium, aimed at addressing competition concerns while still preserving environmental protections in Brazil's soybean supply chain.
  • Looking to export and analyze Amazon.com data? Unlock 5 Weeks of MarketBeat All Access for Just $5. Claim Your Limited-Time Discount.

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — A move in Brazil to suspend a soybean moratorium has scientists and environmentalists warning that losing the agreement could undermine years of progress in cutting deforestation in the Amazon.

A federal judge has temporarily paused the regulator’s order while the case is reviewed, keeping the moratorium in effect for now as the dispute plays out at Brazil’s competition regulator, CADE, and in court.

What the moratorium is and how it works

The moratorium is a multi-stakeholder initiative launched in 2006 after pressure from environmental groups and international buyers, and made indefinite in 2016. It is not a law, but a commitment by major soy traders — later endorsed by the government — to avoid buying soy from Amazon land deforested after July 2008. In 2016, it was renewed without an end date, to remain in place until participants agree it is no longer needed.

It is widely seen as one of the most effective supply-chain tools for slowing deforestation. Enforcement combines satellite monitoring with government farm registries to spot any deforestation in the Amazon biome. Traders must block purchases from farms found in violation, and independent auditors check their supplier lists annually.

Why it is being challenged and debated

Earlier this month, CADE ordered a preventive suspension of the pact while it investigates whether the agreement restricts competition. The regulator has opened an administrative proceeding against Soy Moratorium signatories, including Anec, Abiove, and some 30 soybean traders, accusing them of potential cartel-like behavior under antitrust law.

Critics argue this effectively discourages companies from continuing to avoid soy purchases from newly deforested Amazon land, because it risks branding environmental compliance as an illegal restriction on competition.

The probe follows complaints from several powerful farm interests. They include the agriculture committee of Brazil’s lower house of Congress, the soy and corn producers’ association in Mato Grosso — Brazil’s top soy-producing state — and the country’s main national farm lobby.

What environmentalists and scientists say

Ane Alencar, director of science at the Amazon Environmental Research Institute, said CADE’s move “makes no sense and is dangerous for business” because it treats traders’ compliance with the moratorium as potential wrongdoing, effectively punishing those who followed its rules.

The pact, she said, was crucial in drastically reducing deforestation while maintaining access to demanding markets, and helped restore the soy sector’s reputation for years.

Cristiane Mazzetti, a forest campaign coordinator with Greenpeace Brazil, said the ruling offers a breather but the pact “remains under attack from an agribusiness lobby concerned only with removing barriers to predatory production.” Ending it, she said, would have “devastating consequences for the Amazon” and could “threaten agreements that seek to end deforestation and conversion once and for all.”

“Without the moratorium, soy could once again supercharge deforestation,” Mazzetti said, pushing the forest toward a tipping point and jeopardizing rainfall “upon which all Brazilian farmers rely.”

“By dismantling such an effective, multi-stakeholder agreement built and strengthened over nearly two decades, we would be shooting ourselves in the foot,” she said. She urged CADE, Brazil’s competition authority, to weigh the fallout of scrapping the pact and to make clear that deforestation has no place in corporate supply chains.

Brazilian climate scientist Carlos Nobre said efforts to dismantle the moratorium are tied to broader pushes to weaken private-land forest protections.

“They are already battling to diminish (the legal reserve) to 50%,” he said, warning that such moves could “exponentially accelerate deforestation in the Amazon. Much of this deforestation will be for soy.”

He added that: “We should prohibit deforestation in the Amazon because it is very close to the point of no return.”

The World Wildlife Fund in Brazil says the pact proved soy production can grow without new deforestation and warns that suspending it risks both the Amazon and Brazil’s access to deforestation-conscious markets.

Government and agribusiness reactions

Brazil’s environment ministry has defended the moratorium as a pioneering, internationally recognized instrument with demonstrable results and argues competition rules should not be applied in ways that ignore environmental safeguards.

In a statement, the Soy and Corn Producers Association of Mato Grosso — which represents growers in Brazil’s top soy-producing state and a major exporter to global markets — said it respects the court’s decision but urged CADE’s full tribunal to keep the moratorium suspended. The group called the pact a private deal without legal basis that has unfairly blocked small and medium farmers from markets, even when operating legally, and argued its end would restore fair access now dominated by a handful of large traders.

The Brazilian Vegetable Oil Industry Association, which represents major soy traders that are signatories to the pact, told the AP the moratorium has been key to decoupling soy from Amazon deforestation while allowing production to expand and strengthening Brazil’s access to demanding markets in Europe and Asia. It warned that ending it could damage the country’s credibility, create trade barriers and threaten nearly two decades of progress in keeping soy supply chains free of deforestation.

CADE did not respond to a request for comment.

What happens next

CADE’s tribunal will rule on the administrative appeal, and further legal steps are possible that could modify, reinstate or replace elements of the pact to address competition concerns while trying to preserve environmental safeguards.

The Brazilian Vegetable Oil Industry Association said it will monitor developments closely, comply with court rulings and continue dialogue with producers, the government and civil society.

For now, the moratorium continues, but its long-term survival remains uncertain.

___

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

Should You Invest $1,000 in Amazon.com Right Now?

Before you consider Amazon.com, you'll want to hear this.

MarketBeat keeps track of Wall Street's top-rated and best performing research analysts and the stocks they recommend to their clients on a daily basis. MarketBeat has identified the five stocks that top analysts are quietly whispering to their clients to buy now before the broader market catches on... and Amazon.com wasn't on the list.

While Amazon.com currently has a Buy rating among analysts, top-rated analysts believe these five stocks are better buys.

View The Five Stocks Here

7 Stocks to Ride The A.I. Megaboom Cover


We are about to experience the greatest A.I. boom in stock market history...

Thanks to a pivotal economic catalyst, specific tech stocks will skyrocket just like they did during the "dot com" boom in the 1990s.

That’s why, we’ve hand-selected 7 tiny tech disruptor stocks positioned to surge.

  1. The first pick is a tiny under-the-radar A.I. stock that's trading for just $3.00. This company already has 98 registered patents for cutting-edge voice and sound recognition technology... And has lined up major partnerships with some of the biggest names in the auto, tech, and music industry... plus many more.
  2. The second pick presents an affordable avenue to bolster EVs and AI development…. Analysts are calling this stock a “buy” right now and predict a high price target of $19.20, substantially more than its current $6 trading price.
  3. Our final and favorite pick is generating a brand-new kind of AI. It's believed this tech will be bigger than the current well-known leader in this industry… Analysts predict this innovative tech is gearing up to create a tidal wave of new wealth, fueling a $15.7 TRILLION market boom.

Right now, we’re staring down the barrel of a true once-in-a-lifetime moment. As an investment opportunity, this kind of breakthrough doesn't come along every day.

And the window to get in on the ground-floor — maximizing profit potential from this expected market surge — is closing quickly...

Simply enter your email below to get the names and tickers of the 7 small stocks with potential to make investors very, very happy.

Get This Free Report
Like this article? Share it with a colleague.

Featured Articles and Offers

Recent Videos

$15 Billion for Cybersecurity: The Government’s Next Big Push
Tesla’s Future Unleashed: Elon’s Robotics Move Changes Everything
Top Trades: Massive Gains and Costly Mistakes to Avoid

Stock Lists

All Stock Lists

Investing Tools

Calendars and Tools

Search Headlines