#1
http://www.unep.org/forests/Portals/142/docs/our_vision/Green_Steel.pdf

At the industrial level, the use of charcoal as a smelting fuel for iron ore has been experiencing a resurgence in South America following upon the heels of 2010 changes in Brazilian law, ratified by the National Congress, to cut rates in deforestation. The purpose: to reduce carbon emissions as part of President Lula da Silva's commitment to make "green steel". As a result, the iron and steel industries have committed to use only charcoal in their high-temperature furnaces. Additionally, as part of the country’s plan to bring down its greenhouse gas emissions, production in Brazil is based exclusively on charcoal derived from fast growing eucalyptus.

http://www.greenpeace.org/international/Global/international/publications/forests/2012/Amazon/423-Driving-Destruction-in-the-Amazon.pdf

Wood charcoal is burning up more than what’s for dinner at backyard barbeques. In Brazil – the world’s largest consumer of wood charcoal1 – turning iron ore dirt into steel requires massive amounts of energy, and for the rainforest in the northeastern Amazon this energy has come at a heavy price. Wood charcoal made from the charred remnants of the rainforest is used to heat pig iron blast furnaces that provide raw material for the steel mills and cast iron foundries. Steel is found everywhere – in cars, appliances, construction, and airplanes.

Two years of Greenpeace investigations, summarised in this report, reveal that end users – including major global car manufacturers – indirectly or directly source pig iron whose production is fuelled by forest destruction and slave labour in their supply chains. On notice for many years due to media and industry articles, these companies continue to disregard evidence that some of their suppliers are breaking Brazilian labour and environmental laws, and wreaking havoc in the Amazon.

Few places in the Amazon have experienced as much forest destruction as the Carajás region (made up of portions of Pará, Maranhão and Tocantins states). Like other sites of rainforest devastation in Brazil, most of the denuded land is today occupied by soy farms and cattle pastures. What makes this region different, however, is the fact that logging and charcoal production have served as principal drivers of forest loss in the region.2

Over the years, thousands of remote charcoal camps, spread throughout the region have pillaged huge areas of natural rainforest to smoulder into wood charcoal to fuel the blast furnaces of the region’s production of pig iron, a primary ingredient for steel. The world’s largest iron mine, under the control of Vale SA, the world’s second largest mining company3 , is centrally located in the region. Since the late 1980s, this iron ore deposit has attracted the development of 43 pig iron blast furnaces operated by 18 companies.4

These blast furnaces - fuelled by charcoal - use substantial amounts of raw iron ore from this mine that is processed into pig iron. The Brazilian government has invested heavily in the region’s pig iron, mining sector and infrastructure through the Programa Grande Carajás (“The Great Carajas Programme”). Financing for this project came mostly from the World Bank, the European Economic Community (predecessor to the European Union) and the Japanese government.5 The pig iron industry and its charcoal suppliers have brought severe negative impacts to the region.

Aside from intense forest destruction, the charcoal industry has a notorious track record for slave labour. Furthermore, the rush to seize the forest for both timber and charcoal has fuelled violence and land conflicts. Almost all of the pig iron connected to the region’s devastation is exported to the US and used as a primary ingredient for making steel or cast iron. Despite attention to the problem over the years, little has been done and household consumer products in the US can still be traced back to illegalities and forest destruction in the Amazon. Addressing these problems will require action on behalf of both the Brazilian government and the American steel and cast iron industries and their major consumers, such as Ford, General Motors, BMW, Mercedes, Nissan, and John Deere.
#2
Killing Hope by Wilford Brimley
#3
CIA did 9/11? CIA did Amazon deforestation?

You can call me Henry.