Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Big beef Cowboy 'heroes' at odds with changes in climate and culture
The Guardian
|April 18, 2025
ellowstone in Montana may have the most romanticized cowboy culture in the world thanks to the TV drama series of the same name starring Kevin Costner. But the true home of the 21st-century cowboy is about 7,500 miles south, in what used to be the Amazon rainforest of Brazil, where the reality of raising cattle is better characterized by depression, market pressure and vexed efforts to prevent the destruction of the land and its people.
The toll was apparent along the rutted PA 279 road in Pará state. Record drought has dried up irrigation ponds and burned pasture grass down to the roots, leaving emaciated cattle behind the fences.
This year, this state will host the Cop30 climate conference, which would be an ideal moment for Brazil to demonstrate progress on a new system to track livestock and reduce emissions from deforestation due to be completed by the end of 2026. But few ranchers believe this will happen because of the huge gulf between what locals want and what the world needs.
"What is our biggest disease today? Depression. That's what is killing the most [producers]," said Thaueny Stival, the owner of a mid-sized ranch in Pará. A thoughtful man who says he is trying to modernize and do the right thing, Stival said ranchers were struggling to cope with rapidly changing perceptions about food production.
When pioneers first arrived in this region in the 1980s, he says, they were encouraged to clear forest by Brazil's government (then a military dictatorship). Banks would not give them loans unless they had cleared most of their land.
But that partial and romanticized story of Amazon colonization from half a century ago has been overtaken by more recent and brutal changes. The first ranchers here were told they were heroes for opening up new economic frontiers, but the climate crisis has dealt a triple blow to their reputation and their livelihoods.
Not only has it become harder to feed and water their livestock, but they now face criticism for wrecking a biodiverse pillar of the global environment while also bearing the brunt of conflicting demands from multinational food corporations to provide food that is economically cheap and ecologically ethical. The result is that the ranchers who once considered themselves national heroes are treated as global pariahs.
Stival said the average rancher was suffering beyond endurance.
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin April 18, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The Guardian'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
The Guardian
Trump critic pleads not guilty in case seen as retribution
The New York state attorney general, Letitia James, pleaded not guilty yesterday to charges of bank fraud and false statements brought after Donald Trump publicly called for her to be prosecuted in a move widely seen as political retribution.
2 mins
October 25, 2025
The Guardian
'I'm afraid I can't do that': survival drive could stop Als shutting down
When HAL 9000, the AI supercomputer in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, works out that the astronauts it was meant to serve are planning to shut it down, it plots to kill them in order to survive.
1 mins
October 25, 2025
The Guardian
Bacon should be sold with bowel cancer warning, say scientists
Bacon and ham sold in the UK should carry cigarette-style labels warning that chemicals in them cause bowel cancer, scientists say.
1 mins
October 25, 2025
The Guardian
Inaccessible chargers 'stopping disabled drivers going electric'
Campaigners including Tanni Grey-Thompson have warned that disabled drivers are at risk of being locked out of the transition to electric cars because of inaccessible chargers.
1 mins
October 25, 2025
The Guardian
Trump-Putin talks
Oil sanctions caught Moscow off guard
3 mins
October 25, 2025
The Guardian
Gen Z group to march in Peru despite new state of emergency
A youth group in Peru calling itself the Generation Z Collective says it will march again today in defiance of a state of emergency declared by the government in the capital, Lima, and the neighbouring port of Callao.
2 mins
October 25, 2025
The Guardian
Napoleon's army was weakened by fever, new DNA testing confirms
When Napoleon ordered his army to retreat from Russia in October 1812, disaster ensued. Starving, cold, exhausted and sick, an estimated 300,000 troops died.
2 mins
October 25, 2025
The Guardian
After London summit, Zelenskyy says US must stay involved in peace efforts
Volodymyr Zelenskyy said yesterday that Ukraine wanted the US to stay involved in efforts to end the war, after a meeting of western allies in London that took place without Donald Trump.
3 mins
October 25, 2025
The Guardian
Six Britons jailed for pro-Russia attack on warehouse
Six Britons acting for the pro-Russia Wagner group of terrorists have been jailed for setting fire to a London warehouse storing humanitarian aid for Ukraine.
2 mins
October 25, 2025
The Guardian
The result A new kind of electorate is far more willing to ditch the two big parties
Plaid Cymru’s byelection victory in the Welsh town of Caerphilly is unprecedented. Labour had won every election here for more than a century. Yet the result also feels strangely familiar.
2 mins
October 25, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

