• Home
  • How We Work
  • Where We Work
  • News Room
  • About Us
  • My Nature Page

The Nature Conservancy in Africa - Conservation in Africa

The Nature Conservancy in Asia Pacific - Conservation in Asia-Pacific

The Nature Conservancy in the Caribbean - Conservation in the Caribbean

The Nature Conservancy in Central America - Conservation in Central America

The Nature Conservancy in North America - Conservation in North America

The Nature Conservancy in the United States - Conservation in the United States

The Nature Conservancy in South America - Conservation in South America

Brazil Where We Work: Responsible Soy in the Amazon

 

Restoration course for sustainable soy project

Get Involved

 

Your call-to-action button goes here: 180px wide by 31px tall and linked to a donation, GPN sign-up, or other action-oriented page.

You can learn more about our work in the Amazon and our efforts to encourage sustainable farming when you join the Conservancy's online community and build your own personalized nature page.

Go Deeper

 Market-Based Incentives for Conservation

Find out how the Conservancy is working with Cargill to provide market-based incentives to farmers who follow sustainable practices.
 

Courses on Rainforest Restoration

As part of its Responsible Soy project,  the Conservancy and its partners recently hosted a workshop to help farmers implement restoration plans on their land.

European Pressure

The European Union bought 10 million tons of soy from Brazil in 2006, primarily for use as animal feed. Now, European consumers are pressuring fast food outlets to stop using feed that comes from deforested land in the Amazon.

Explore the Amazon

Covering an area larger than the entire continental United States and containing the largest tropical forest in the world, the Amazon River Basin harbors nearly one-third of the world’s species and contains nearly one-quarter of the earth’s fresh water.
 

Soybean farm, Mato Grosso, Brazil


In a region of the Brazilian Amazon known for its lush rainforest, spectacular white-sand river beaches, and pink dolphins, large-scale farming threatens biological diversity. In response to this threat, The Nature Conservancy is working with with soy farmers on an initiative that has the potential to conserve nearly 1.2 million acres of this important tropical forest.

Verifying Environmental Protection

In the initial phase of the project which began in 2004, four field teams comprised of Conservancy staff and partners utilized 108 satellite images and field visits with 300 small-, medium- and large-scale soy farmers to complete an environmental assessment that lays the groundwork for this initiative that will verify that soy has been cultivated in an environmentally sensitive way. Utilizing this assessment, they began a pilot project for environmental compliance with the goal of slowing rainforest conversion caused by large-scale farming.

 

Moving Sustainable Farming Forward

The pilot project evolved from working originally with 25 farmers to now encompass 210 farmers with the objective of helping them develop eco-friendly practices that abide with Brazilian environmental legislation. To move the initiative forward, the Conservancy and its partner have:

 

  • Hosted a three-day workshop to help provide technical assistance to producers involved on the restoration of degraded areas.
  • Continued to provide technical assistance to farmers to help them come into compliance with environmental legislation.
  •  In the coming months, the Conservancy will also update the assessment that was conducted in 2005 to have an up-to-date portrait of all producers in the region, especially those who recently entered into the project.

This initiative is a step forward in promoting environmentally and socially-conscious agricultural practices that help protect valuable Amazon forest habitat.

Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photo © Photographer/Org (prickly pear cactus); Photo © Photographer/Org (cheetah).