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Behind Brazil's ethanol boom, brutal working conditions

June 16, 2008 |  8:33 am

Brazil_harvest "Even as Brazil's booming economy is powered by fuel processed from [sugar] cane, labor officials are confronting what some call the country's dirty little ethanol secret: the mostly primitive conditions endured by the multitudes of workers who cut the cane," writes the Times' Patrick J. McDonnell from Bocaina, Brazil.

Biofuels may help reduce humanity's carbon footprint, but the social footprint is substantial.

"These workers should have a break, a place to eat and access to a proper restroom," Marcus Vinicius Goncalves, a government labor cop in suit and tie, declared in the midst of a snarl of felled stalks and bedraggled cane cutters here. "This is degrading treatment."

"More than 300,000 farmworkers are seasonal cane cutters in Brazil, the government says. By most accounts, their work and living conditions range from basic to deplorable to outright servitude."

-- Reed Johnson in Mexico City

Photo: Mechanized harvesting of sugar cane is on the rise in Brazil, but the majority of the work is done manually. Worker advocates say laborers typically endure low pay, excessive work hours, an absence of basic amenities and exposure to pesticides. Credit: Nelson Almeida / AFP/Getty Images


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