Highlighting the Roles of Producers and Consumers in Land and Water use
for Agricultural Production in Southern Amazonia
Abstract
For decades, agricultural expansion in Southern Amazonia has relied on
deforestation to increase the national and global supplies of cattle and
soybean products. Research on the use of land and water for increasing
the region’s pasture and cropland outputs has provided important insight
into the role of producers in managing these resources. However, the
roles of other actors on cattle and soybean production systems (e.g.
traders) have been less apparent. For instance, some private
initiatives, such as the Cattle Agreement or the Soybean Moratorium,
have been proposed to curb deforestation through the cattle and soybean
supply chains as a means to influence the production process. Here, we
highlight the role of producers and consumers in the use of land and
water resources for agricultural production in the state of Mato Grosso,
Brazil, by combining field measurements and modelling with trade
mapping. We use the Transparency for sustainable economies platform
(Trase, https://trase.earth) to highlight the role of trade actors by
combining high resolution trade information (e.g. custom declarations)
with up-to-date deforestation and water scarcity maps. In 2015, up to
five traders with zero deforestation commitments exported over 40% of
soybean produced in the state of Mato Grosso. Within this context,
producers can increase agricultural output by irrigating cropland,
and/or concentrating cattle production on current pastureland, but this
combined system has the potential to increase water scarcity in the dry
season. Our analysis provides additional information on the drivers
shaping the Brazilian agricultural frontier and attempts to bring
producers and consumers closer together in agricultural supply chains.