Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/Sawmill-for-Coal-Production--Brazil--2007--27MZIFPFA9U.htmlConceptually similarTruck with Timber (Brazil: 2007)GP0RVKCompleted★★★★Truck Transports Logs (Brazil: 2007)GP01AMFCompleted★★★★Timber for Shipping (Brazil: 2007)GP0132ECompleted★★★★Trucks Transport Illegal Timber (Brazil: 2007)GP0TBZCompleted★★★★Greenpeace Transamazonica tour, investigating illegal logging.GP0101HCompleted★★★★Greenpeace Transamazonica tour, investigating illegal logging.GP0YM7Completed★★★★Illegal mahogany logging, Uruara, Middle Land, Brazil.GP0E7ZCompleted★★★★Odani Sawmill in Para State, BrazilGP0STONB4Completed★★★★★★Sawmill in Para StateGP0132MCompleted★★★★View AllGP0QE0Sawmill for Coal Production (Brazil: 2007)Coal production from wood in a sawmill near a land settlement.An eight-month Greenpeace investigation revealed that the Brazilian Government’s Agency for Land Reform (INCRA) is setting aside large ‘land settlements’ in rainforest areas of great value to the timber industry, instead of already-deforested areas intended for farming land for poor communities. Once set up, the Agency encourages links between the logging companies and unregulated ‘land settlers associations’, which encourages the gross exploitation of the newly-formed ‘settlement’.Locations:Brazil-Pará-Santarém-South AmericaDate:16 Jun, 2007Credit:© Greenpeace / Alberto Cesar AraújoMaximum size:1168px X 1752pxKeywords:Aerial view-Brazilian Government-Commercial logging-Day-Deforestation-Forests (campaign title)-GOVERNMENTS & GOVERNMENT ORGANISATIONS-KWCI (GPI)-Outdoors-Sawmills-Timber industryShoot:Land Reform Agency Investigation in BrazilAn eight-month Greenpeace investigation revealed that the Brazilian Government's Agency for Land Reform (INCRA) is setting aside large ˜land settlements" in rainforest areas of great value to the timber industry, instead of already-deforested areas intended for farming land for poor communities. Once set up, the Agency encourages links between the logging companies and unregulated ˜land settlers associations", which encourages the gross exploitation of the newly-formed ˜settlement".