American financiers invested in companies linked to indigenous rights violations
BlackRock, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Vanguard, Bank of America, and Dimensional Fund Advisors, among others, invested in companies complicit in land conflicts with Indigenous peoples in the Brazilian Amazon.
- Análisis
A new report by the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB) and Amazon Watch exposes international financiers– including BlackRock, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Vanguard, Bank of America, and Dimensional Fund Advisors –invested in companies complicit in land conflicts with Indigenous peoples in the Brazilian Amazon.
Brasília, Brazil and Oakland, USA – U.S.-based financial institutions play a key role in enabling the destructive actions of companies linked to violations of Indigenous rights and conflicts in Indigenous territories in the Brazilian Amazon, according to a new report published today by the Association of Brazil’s Indigenous Peoples (APIB) and Amazon Watch.
Complicity in Destruction III: How global corporations enable violations of Indigenous peoples' rights in the Brazilian Amazon identifies six major U.S.-based financial Institutions—BlackRock, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Vanguard, Bank of America, and Dimensional Fund Advisors—that from 2017 to 2020 invested more than US$18 billion dollars in nine companies enabling environmental and Indigenous rights violations. The report documents how three Brazilian economic sectors—mining, agribusiness, and energy—have driven conflicts with Amazonian Indigenous peoples in recent years.
The following nine companies in those three sectors are profiled in the report: mining companies Vale, Anglo American, and Belo Sun; agribusiness companies Cargill, JBS, and Cosan/Raízen; and energy companies Energisa Mato Grosso, Equatorial Energia Maranhão, and Eletronorte, spanning the states of Pará, Maranhão, Mato Grosso, Amazonas, and Roraima. The case studies outline the nine companies’ involvement in a series of abuses including land invasions, the violation of Indigenous peoples’ rights to Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC), violence against Indigenous communities, illegal deforestation, and the use of pesticides, among others.
“The flow of foreign investments to companies operating in Brazil has expanded into an intricate international network. As these projects advance, Indigenous peoples are often treated as an 'obstacle to development,' and their lands are invaded, occupied, looted, and destroyed,” said Eloy Terena, APIB's attorney and Indigenous leader. “These conflicts stem from the pressure to open new exploitative operations in Indigenous territories, leading to full-on attacks by land-grabbers and other local actors, accompanied by the systematic disrespect for the legislation that protects Indigenous lands and rights.”
According to data analyzed by APIB and Amazon Watch, the world’s largest asset manager, BlackRock, invests in nearly all of the companies identified in this report. BlackRock alone holds over US$8.2 billion of stocks and bonds in JBS, Energisa, Belo Sun, Vale, Anglo American, Cargill, Cosan, Eletrobras, and Equatorial Energia. Despite receiving widespread accolades for taking steps to address its investments in climate-damaging industries earlier this year, BlackRock lacks any binding policies to address the impacts of its investments on the rights of Indigenous peoples or on the deforestation of tropical rainforests like the Amazon.
The second-largest asset manager in the world, Vanguard, holds shares and/or bonds in eight of those companies: Anglo American, Cargill, Cosan, Eletrobras, Energisa, Equatorial Energia, Vale, and JBS, for a total of US$2.7 billion.
JPMorgan Chase, whose Social and Environmental Policy Framework includes a specific commitment to protecting Indigenous rights, has invested US$2.4 billion in the companies Anglo American, Cargill, Cosan, Eletrobras, Energisa, Equatorial, Vale, and JBS.
"Our findings show that major financiers such as BlackRock, Vanguard, and JPMorgan Chase are using their client’s money to enable the wanton behavior of companies linked to Indigenous rights violations and the devastation of the Amazon rainforest,” said Christian Poirier, Amazon Watch’s Program Director. “This financial complicity in destruction contradicts the climate and human rights pledges touted by some of these firms, exposes their investors to significant risk, and contributes dramatically to the world's growing biodiversity and climate crises.”
Methodology and Recommendations
Complicity in Destruction III draws upon research by the journalistic observatory De Olho Nos Ruralistas (Ruralist Watch - DONR) and the Dutch research institution Profundo. DONR mapped the activities of Brazilian and international companies to identify abuses such as Indigenous land invasions, illegal deforestation, and other Indigenous rights violations across Brazil. Based on this initial survey, Profundo analyzed production chains, buyers, and international investors, cross-referencing data to identify the eleven companies profiled–nine of which are directly financed by the six financial institutions named in the report.
The report also provides recommendations for companies operating or with projects in Brazil, for importing companies, for financial institutions, and for governments and policymakers around the world. Recommendations from the report are available in the summary, here.
Notable Case Studies in the Report
- The global meatpacking giant JBS stands out among cases profiled in the report. Known for its lack of commitment to tracking indirect suppliers, it bought cattle illegally raised on the Indigenous lands of the Uru-Eu-Wau-Wau, in Rondônia state, and the Kayabi, in Mato Grosso state.
- Findings also show how Energisa Mato Grosso was indicted by the Federal Public Prosecutor in 2019 for providing rural electricity services to illegal land-grabbers involved in invasions of the Urubu Branco Indigenous territory since 1998.
- The Canadian mining company Belo Sun has eleven prospecting claims under consideration at Brazil's National Mining Agency which directly threaten the Arara da Volta Grande do Xingu and Trincheira Bacajá Indigenous lands, in Pará.
- While it denies all allegations, research shows that the mining giant Vale has filed hundreds of applications for exploration within Amazonian Indigenous lands. The company is also accused of contaminating the Cateté River, the main source of water for the Xikrin Indigenous Territory, while the Carajás Railway it uses to transports its commodities directly affects four Indigenous lands: Rio Pindaré, Mãe Maria, Xikrin, and Arariboia. Indigenous people accuse Vale of consistently failing to comply with agreements it has signed to mitigate impacts.
The companies profiled in the groundbreaking new report are but a few of the many actors implicated in today’s devastation of the Brazilian Amazon. They do not operate alone, and their actions should be understood as emblematic of greater trends that increasingly imperil the rainforest.
- Access the full report and executive summary here (English/Spanish).
- Amazon Watch is a nonprofit organization founded in 1996 to protect the rainforest and advance the rights of Indigenous peoples in the Amazon Basin.
Del mismo autor
- Law students join in multi-state protest against Gibson Dunn’s unethical practices 21/03/2022
- Donziger’s appeal denied 27/10/2021
- New report by human rights coalition exposes mounting threats against rights defenders 16/06/2021
- Brazilian Government authorizes in-person meeting between mining company and indigenous peoples 12/03/2021
- Anglo American does not rule out mining on Indigenous lands in the Brazilian Amazon 10/02/2021
- Brazilian indigenous leaders issue call for Blackrock to adopt a forests and indigenous rights policy 11/01/2021
- American financiers invested in companies linked to indigenous rights violations 27/10/2020
- Global human rights and environmental communities condemn house arrest of lawyer Steven Donziger 14/11/2019
- Trade Tribunal Validates Corporate Abuse of Amazonians by Ruling in Chevron's Favor 10/09/2018
- Record Environmental Judgement Moves to Ontario Superior Court in Toronto 06/04/2018