Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/Marfrig-Truck-in-Brazil-27MZIFL2N8V5.htmlConceptually similarMarfrig Truck in BrazilGP01XBWCompleted★★★★Driver in a Truck in BrazilGP01XBZCompleted★★★★Marfrig Slaughterhouse Facilities in BrazilGP01XCOCompleted★★★★★★Marfrig Slaughterhouse Facilities in BrazilGP01XCPCompleted★★★★Marfrig Slaughterhouse Facilities in BrazilGP01XCKCompleted★★★★Marfrig Slaughterhouse Facilities in BrazilGP01XCLCompleted★★★★★★Marfrig Slaughterhouse Facilities in BrazilGP01XCMCompleted★★★★Marfrig Slaughterhouse Facilities in BrazilGP01XCNCompleted★★★★Marfrig Slaughterhouse Facilities in BrazilGP01XCFCompleted★★★★View AllGP01XBYMarfrig Truck in BrazilA Marfrig truck on a rural dirt road. Marfrig is the world's fourth largest beef trader. After Greenpeace released a report exposing Marfrig's link to Amazon deforestation, the company announced a moratorium that prevents Marfrig from buying cattle raised in newly deforested areas within the Amazon.Locations:Amazon-America, South America-Brazil-Mato Grosso-Tangara Da SerraDate:29 Mar, 2009Credit:© Ricardo Funari / Lineair / GreenpeaceMaximum size:4368px X 2912pxKeywords:Day-Deforestation-Forests (campaign title)-KWCI (GPI)-Logos-Marfrig Group-Outdoors-Roads-TrucksShoot:Cattle Ranching and Meat Production in the AmazonDocumentation of livestock farms, Marfig slaughterhouse facilities and a tannery factory. Greenpeace released a report exposing the direct links between cattle ranching and deforestation in the state of Mato Grosso, the area of the Amazon with the highest rate of deforestation. Cattle ranching is the primary driver of forest destruction in the Brazilian Amazon, with 79.5 per cent of deforested land used for cattle pasture. Greenpeace is campaigning to expose the trade of cattle raised on illegally deforested land and is calling for all the companies across the world to refuse to buy products sourced from Amazon farms that have carried out illegal deforestation. It wants consumers to pressure supermarkets and other high-street brands identified in the report to clean-up supply chains by refusing to deal with such farms. After the release of the report, Marfrig announced a moratorium that prevents them from buying cattle raised in newly deforested areas within the Amazon.