The Amazon is disappearing—and it’s not an accident.
The Brazilian beef industry, emboldened by President Jair Bolsonaro’s far-right regime, is setting fire to the Amazon to clear land for cattle ranches. And a lot of that beef ends up being exported to countries like the United States.
Brazil is one of the largest suppliers of beef exports to McDonald’s. Which means McDonald’s helps to drive the demand causing the beef industry to set fire to the largest tropical rainforest on earth.
But as a huge buyer of Brazilian beef, McDonald’s has the power to pressure the Brazilian government to take the threat to the Amazon seriously. That’s why we’re calling on McDonald’s to boycott all Brazilian beef products until the Amazon is protected.
Tell McDonald’s to take a stand and boycott Brazilian beef until the fires stop.
Over 76,000 fires have been recorded in Brazil this year—mostly caused by agricultural activity. That’s thanks to Jair Bolsonaro, who has lived up to his campaign promises to weaken environmental protections and increase agricultural production.
That’s bad news for the planet: the Amazon’s biodiversity is literally millions of years in the making, and its size and density has earned it the nickname “the planet’s lungs.” The aggressive deforestation is also claiming the lands and livelihoods of indigenous peoples that call the Amazon home.
To save the Amazon, we’ll all have to make changes. After all, U.S. consumers eat one billion pounds of beef at McDonald’s every single year. That alone is helping drive massive global demand for beef that is setting the Amazon ablaze. But McDonald’s has a chance to help take a stand to protect the world’s largest rainforest—and we have the power to push them to act before it’s too late.
Call on McDonald’s to boycott Brazilian beef until the government clamps down on Amazon deforestation.
More information
How beef demand is accelerating the Amazon’s deforestation and climate peril
Washington Post. 27 August 2019.
Washington Post. 27 August 2019.
Nearly 2,000 new fires have started in the Amazon in the past 48 hours despite burning ban from government
Business Insider. 1 September 2019.
Business Insider. 1 September 2019.