Close Menu
Metals Weekly
    TRENDING -
    • Sterling’s identity crisis
    • US First Nation holds up project in Canada
    • Trump reverses Minnesota mining ban
    • Securing Critical Minerals at Scale: Multilateral Solutions for Energy, Defense, and Semiconductor Supply Chains
    • DOE Explains…Critical Materials
    • Powering AI with Canadian natural hydrogen
    • Electra sizes up U.S. nickel refinery
    • FAST-41 approval for Wyoming rare earth mine adds pressure on separation tech demonstration plant.
    Metals Weekly
    • Home
    • Critical Materials
    • Environment
    • Global Policy
    • Mining
    Metals Weekly
    Home»Environment»One small Indigenous territory emerges as illegal mining hotspot in Brazil’s Amazon

    One small Indigenous territory emerges as illegal mining hotspot in Brazil’s Amazon

    Environment 2 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Screenshot
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    One small Indigenous territory is currently the site of roughly 70% of deforestation in Indigenous territories across the Brazilian Amazon due to illegal mining over the last two years, according to government data.

    The Sararé Indigenous Territory in Mato Grosso state is home to about 200 Nambikwara people. From January 2024 to August 2025, illegal gold mining razed more than 3,000 hectares (7,400 acres) of forest within their territory — more than 4% of its total area of 67,000 hectares (165,600 acres).

    The aggressive encroachment of illegal gold miners into the Sararé territory is relatively recent. According to a Greenpeace report, just 78 hectares (193 acres) of the territory had been impacted by mining until 2018. This began to grow gradually starting in 2021.

    In 2023, there were an estimated 250-300 miners in the territory. This year, government agents estimate that around 2,000 miners were operating on the land.

    From January to August this year, Sararé experienced 85% higher deforestation due to illegal mining than the combined total recorded in the next nine most impacted Indigenous territories, which together lost 640 hectares (1,581 acres) in the same period.

    Sararé was not included in any top mining alerts up to 2023, but has now emerged as the number one territory, by far, impacted by mining.

    The Kayapó Indigenous Territory, located in the state of Pará, appeared in second place for land lost to mining in 2024. Despite the territory being around 49 times larger than Sararé, it lost nearly 10 times less land to illegal mining operations.

    Federal police forces have carried out several large raids to destroy mining equipment in the Sararé territory.

    The latest operation, in September, located 14 bunkers filled with supplies and destroyed four underground mining areas, 42 stationary engines used to run pumps and machinery, and more than 100 campsites.

    One small Indigenous territory emerges as illegal mining hotspot in Brazil’s Amazon

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    US First Nation holds up project in Canada

    Trump reverses Minnesota mining ban

    Mining giant polluted Quebec waters for over a decade before $100M fine. What took so long?

    Don't Miss

    Metals From Copper to Gold Slump as Inflation Fears Roil Markets

    Global Policy 2 Mins Read

    Metals from gold to copper sank in a broad selloff in financial markets amid investor…

    TMC The Metals Moves Toward Commercial Seafloor Production With Allseas Deal

    Prismo Metals Reports Positive Results from Reconnaissance Mapping and Sampling at Silver King Project, Arizona

    TMC scores regulatory win in race to mine Pacific seafloor

    Top Stories

    Electra sizes up U.S. nickel refinery

    Anger grows after China’s deadliest coal mining disaster in years

    Arctic Mine gains FAST-41 permitting status

    Scientists Discover a New Way To Control Metals at the Atomic Scale

    Our Picks

    Zambians pay price amid Copperbelt mining boom

    Zambia says privacy, minerals concerns stall US health aid deal

    Zambia mine regulator lifts suspension of operations at Mopani’s Mufulira mine

    Don't Miss

    Bravus commits to increase mine production in central Queensland

    Aris Mining reports safe recovery of all workers at Segovia mine

    Off and running: Resolution Minerals begins its Horse Heaven hunt for gold-antimony treasures

    Weekly Newsletter

    Subscribe to our weekly Newsletter to keep up to date on the latest news in the metals, minerals and mining industry

    Copyright © 2025 - Metals Weekly. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.