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Keywords
Automotive industry
Burning
Camps
Charcoal
Day
Destruction
Fires
Forests (campaign title)
Illegal
Iron ore mining
KWCI (GPI)
Outdoors
Rainforests
Smoke
Steelmaking industry
Timber
Charcoal Kilns in the Amazon
Illegal charcoal kilns in the municipality of Tucuruí. Thousands of remote charcoal camps in Brazil have pillaged huge areas of natural rainforest to smoulder into wood charcoal. The charcoal is burnt in blast furnaces which convert iron ore to pig iron, an intermediate product in the steelmaking process.
Unique identifier:
GP042MB
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
29/10/2011
Locations:
Brazil
,
Pará
,
South America
,
Tucuruí
Credit line:
© Marizilda Cruppe / Greenpeace
Size:
5616px × 3744px 11MB
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
Pig Iron Production in the Amazon
Thousands of remote charcoal camps in Brazil have pillaged huge areas of natural rainforest to smoulder into wood charcoal. The charcoal is burnt in blast furnaces which convert iron ore to pig iron, an intermediate product in the steelmaking process. A new Greenpeace report "Driving Destruction in the Amazon" reveals how some of the world’s biggest car companies are using steel products made from this pig iron. The report also exposes how the industry relies on cheap labor, luring workers away from small villages to work in inhumane conditions. Millions of small pig iron blocks are exported and purchased by the Severstal steel mill in Columbus, Mississippi. This plant directly claims to supply Ford, GM, Mercedes and BMW. Greenpeace is demanding that companies implement policies that permanently rule out the use of any product linked to deforestation or slave labor.
Related Collections:
Driving Rainforest Destruction In The Amazon.
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