Intersectional Environmental Justice in Dutch-Brazilian Beef and Soy Trade: Challenges for the EU Regulation on Deforestation-Free Products

Intensive agricultural trade is associated with environmental injustice, affecting marginalised populations while depleting forests, rivers and biodiversity. Brazil is the leading soy exporter globally, while the Netherlands is the main soy importer in the EU. This bilateral soy trade is connected t...

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Main Authors: Vinícius Mendes, Cristina Yumie Aoki Inoue, Niels Søndergaard, Nathália Tavares
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services) 2025-07-01
Series:International Journal of the Commons
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Online Access:https://account.thecommonsjournal.org/index.php/up-j-ijc/article/view/1454
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author Vinícius Mendes
Cristina Yumie Aoki Inoue
Niels Søndergaard
Nathália Tavares
author_facet Vinícius Mendes
Cristina Yumie Aoki Inoue
Niels Søndergaard
Nathália Tavares
author_sort Vinícius Mendes
collection DOAJ
description Intensive agricultural trade is associated with environmental injustice, affecting marginalised populations while depleting forests, rivers and biodiversity. Brazil is the leading soy exporter globally, while the Netherlands is the main soy importer in the EU. This bilateral soy trade is connected to forest degradation, rising emissions, and pesticide pollution. Similarly, international beef trade connects the Netherlands with deforestation and land conflicts in Brazil. In 2023, the EU approved the Regulation on Deforestation-free Products (EUDR) to tackle biodiversity loss and forest degradation, to decouple agricultural imports from deforestation in producing countries. However, civil society organisations claim that the EUDR overlooks the underlying drivers of environmental injustice, for humans and non-humans. For example, land tenure conflicts between local communities and large soy farmers (whose growing use of land is influenced by international trade markets), and the financial stakeholders linked to activities leading to forest loss and land dispossession. In this article, we assess the Dutch-Brazilian beef and soy trade through the lenses of intersectional environmental justice (IEJ) and suggest how to improve the EUDR in light of the findings. Intersectionality helps us identify injustices, the drivers and associated actors. Yet, no previous study has mapped intersectional environmental injustices in these supply chains. Our data includes 20 semi-structured interviews with environmental NGOs, businesses, government and academics from both countries, besides secondary sources (15 NGO reports and policy papers). Our recommendations include amendments to be incorporated into the existing version of the EUDR. Specifically, geolocation tools that help businesses track not only deforestation risks, but also intersectional injustices and human rights threats along soy and beef supply chains. And, more broadly, measures to track risks associated with pollution, land dispossession, hunger, health and the impacts of infrastructures on IPLCs. The article contributes to the Commons literature by providing empirical evidence on the interconnections between forests loss, commodity trade and human rights abuses, supporting a diagnosis of the necessary transformations that can positively impact biodiversity in social-ecological systems in both countries.
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spelling doaj-art-b64326ce663e4f3798560381349e2f222025-08-21T12:35:47ZengUtrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)International Journal of the Commons1875-02812025-07-01191293–306293–30610.5334/ijc.14541334Intersectional Environmental Justice in Dutch-Brazilian Beef and Soy Trade: Challenges for the EU Regulation on Deforestation-Free ProductsVinícius Mendes0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7512-8533Cristina Yumie Aoki Inoue1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3696-252XNiels Søndergaard2https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8727-7912Nathália Tavares3https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9670-6363Radboud UniversityRadboud UniversityUniversity of BrasíliaFederal University of ParáIntensive agricultural trade is associated with environmental injustice, affecting marginalised populations while depleting forests, rivers and biodiversity. Brazil is the leading soy exporter globally, while the Netherlands is the main soy importer in the EU. This bilateral soy trade is connected to forest degradation, rising emissions, and pesticide pollution. Similarly, international beef trade connects the Netherlands with deforestation and land conflicts in Brazil. In 2023, the EU approved the Regulation on Deforestation-free Products (EUDR) to tackle biodiversity loss and forest degradation, to decouple agricultural imports from deforestation in producing countries. However, civil society organisations claim that the EUDR overlooks the underlying drivers of environmental injustice, for humans and non-humans. For example, land tenure conflicts between local communities and large soy farmers (whose growing use of land is influenced by international trade markets), and the financial stakeholders linked to activities leading to forest loss and land dispossession. In this article, we assess the Dutch-Brazilian beef and soy trade through the lenses of intersectional environmental justice (IEJ) and suggest how to improve the EUDR in light of the findings. Intersectionality helps us identify injustices, the drivers and associated actors. Yet, no previous study has mapped intersectional environmental injustices in these supply chains. Our data includes 20 semi-structured interviews with environmental NGOs, businesses, government and academics from both countries, besides secondary sources (15 NGO reports and policy papers). Our recommendations include amendments to be incorporated into the existing version of the EUDR. Specifically, geolocation tools that help businesses track not only deforestation risks, but also intersectional injustices and human rights threats along soy and beef supply chains. And, more broadly, measures to track risks associated with pollution, land dispossession, hunger, health and the impacts of infrastructures on IPLCs. The article contributes to the Commons literature by providing empirical evidence on the interconnections between forests loss, commodity trade and human rights abuses, supporting a diagnosis of the necessary transformations that can positively impact biodiversity in social-ecological systems in both countries.https://account.thecommonsjournal.org/index.php/up-j-ijc/article/view/1454environmental justiceintersectionalityinternational tradesoybeefbrazilthe netherlandseuropean unioneudr
spellingShingle Vinícius Mendes
Cristina Yumie Aoki Inoue
Niels Søndergaard
Nathália Tavares
Intersectional Environmental Justice in Dutch-Brazilian Beef and Soy Trade: Challenges for the EU Regulation on Deforestation-Free Products
International Journal of the Commons
environmental justice
intersectionality
international trade
soy
beef
brazil
the netherlands
european union
eudr
title Intersectional Environmental Justice in Dutch-Brazilian Beef and Soy Trade: Challenges for the EU Regulation on Deforestation-Free Products
title_full Intersectional Environmental Justice in Dutch-Brazilian Beef and Soy Trade: Challenges for the EU Regulation on Deforestation-Free Products
title_fullStr Intersectional Environmental Justice in Dutch-Brazilian Beef and Soy Trade: Challenges for the EU Regulation on Deforestation-Free Products
title_full_unstemmed Intersectional Environmental Justice in Dutch-Brazilian Beef and Soy Trade: Challenges for the EU Regulation on Deforestation-Free Products
title_short Intersectional Environmental Justice in Dutch-Brazilian Beef and Soy Trade: Challenges for the EU Regulation on Deforestation-Free Products
title_sort intersectional environmental justice in dutch brazilian beef and soy trade challenges for the eu regulation on deforestation free products
topic environmental justice
intersectionality
international trade
soy
beef
brazil
the netherlands
european union
eudr
url https://account.thecommonsjournal.org/index.php/up-j-ijc/article/view/1454
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AT cristinayumieaokiinoue intersectionalenvironmentaljusticeindutchbrazilianbeefandsoytradechallengesfortheeuregulationondeforestationfreeproducts
AT nielssøndergaard intersectionalenvironmentaljusticeindutchbrazilianbeefandsoytradechallengesfortheeuregulationondeforestationfreeproducts
AT nathaliatavares intersectionalenvironmentaljusticeindutchbrazilianbeefandsoytradechallengesfortheeuregulationondeforestationfreeproducts