Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Wednesday proposed lifting a ban on mining in indigenous territories in the Amazon to offset potential fertilizer shortages due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The far-right leader said that mineral extraction in indigenous territories – something vehemently opposed by those local communities and environmentalists – was necessary to avoid dependence on imported products.
JAIR BOLSONARO CALLS FOR MINING BAN TO BE LIFTED
“With the Russia/Ukraine war we now face the risk of a lack of potassium or that its price rises,” Bolsonaro wrote on Twitter.
Potassium is a crucial ingredient in many fertilizers.
Agriculture giant Brazil imports more than 80% of the fertilizers it uses, and when it comes to those containing potassium, that figure rises to 96%, according to the agriculture ministry.
Close to 20% of the fertilizers it imports come from Russia.
“Our food security and agribusiness require Executive and Legislative measures so that we don’t depend externally on something we have in abundance,” said Bolsonaro.
JAIR BOLSONARO WANTS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION LAWS TO BE RELAXED
He also cited a bill first proposed in 2020 that would allow for the extraction of minerals in indigenous territories in the Amazon, something that is currently banned by law.
“When this bill is approved, that would solve the problem.”
Since coming to power in 2019, Bolsonaro has pushed for a relaxing of environmental protection laws and has faced international protests due to the increase in Amazon deforestation under his watch.
JAIR BOLSONARO MAINTAINED ‘NEUTRALITY’ IN RUSSA/UKRAINE CONFLICT
Bolsonaro, who visited Russian President Vladimir Putin a week before he sent troops to invade Ukraine, has maintained Brazil’s “neutrality” in the conflict.
However, on Wednesday Brazil supported a United Nations General Assembly resolution demanding Russia withdraw “immediately” from its neighbour.
Later in the day, Agriculture Minister Tereza Cristina told a press conference that Brazil has other partners, such as Canada, who could supply the needed fertilizers:
“If not all of them, at least a good part of them.”