Case Study
Brazil
Associated commodity
Associated commodity
Associated crime
Source
The ties between drug trafficking and illegal timber logging in Brazil's Amazon are growing

A report by InSight Crime demonstrates the growing ties between drug trafficking and illegal timber logging in Brazil's Amazon. The report details how timber shipments from the Amazon are now being used to conceal drugs, primarily cocaine, for export to foreign countries. From 2017 to 2021, authorities seized nearly nine tons of cocaine hidden within timber shipments destined for European countries. In addition to drugs being hidden in timber shipments, the ties between illegal timber logging and drug trafficking is also the consequence of organised crime groups in Brazil diversifying their activity. Indeed, organised crime groups in Brazil have also become involved in illegal mining, land grabbing, logging, gold trading, and invading indigenous lands. Criminal gangs have been known to buy land illegally in the rainforest to profit from logging and to establish marijuana plantations, particularly in Pará's "Marijuana Polygon.". From 2015 to 2020, more than two million marijuana plants were seized across the Amazon region, with 55% of these seizures occurring in Pará.

Keywords
Drug Trafficking, Illegal Logging, Land Grabbing, Organised Crime, Timber, Cocaine, Marijuana, Brazil