What happens when the world’s biggest meat company starts branding itself as a climate saviour? The feeder of the world? You get JBS, a methane cooker mega-corporation that’s making billions and rubbing shoulders with Wall Street while its supply chain sets the Amazon on fire.
If corporate green public relations had a face, it would look a lot like JBS, the Brazilian meat giant with a climate change driving methane footprint that rivals Big Oil, and a public image carefully wrapped in sustainability spin. You may not recognise the name, but its impact is unmistakable: in the smoke that rises over the Amazon, in the stillness of razed forests, and in the rising emissions pushing our planet closer to collapse.
This is the world’s biggest meat company. We’ve said the name for years, and still, the destruction continues.
The people making decisions behind the scenes of JBS want you to think that they are “feeding the world with the best” and saving the climate, even while they turn the Amazon into a methane hotbox. We’re talking around 76,000 cows, 14 million chickens, and 147,000 pigs per day. This is industrial meat pushed beyond the limits of nature, and it’s being driven by the Batista brothers, billionaires with a long trail of environmental harm and corruption behind them. Their company, JBS, is the face of a system turning forests into profit margins and climate stability into shareholder dividends.
From bribery to fraud and good old-fashioned nature destruction, the Batista Brothers have been linked to many a charge. In 2020, the company pled guilty to U.S. foreign bribery charges and shelled out $USD 256 million in fines. As of the beginning of 2025, it was still staring down $USD 6.4B in legal liabilities. However, their core business model depends on a vast supply chain, one that’s driving deforestation in Amazon and other biomes in Brazil at a scale that makes the term ‘eco-crime’ feel like an understatement. All for profit.
Between 2009 and 2023, JBS slaughterhouses were reportedly linked to nearly 470,000 hectares of deforestation in the Amazon and Cerrado, seven times the size of London. And beyond their direct operations lies something even more insidious: an indirect supply chain potentially linked to another more than 1.5 million hectares of forest loss. This devastation is driven by criminal activities like cattle laundering, illegal land grabbing, and repeated violations of Indigenous territories. Their profit might be mighty, but we are the ones who will pay for their methane footprint that rivals even Shell’s and ExxonMobil’s combined.
JBS claims to uphold a zero-deforestation policy. Yet, 14 years after it first promised to eradicate deforestation from its supply chain, it is still heavily linked to suppliers operating in illegally deforested areas. Shocking, isn’t it? Its so-called “sustainability plan” reads more like a polished press release than a pathway to accountability. They even released a “net-zero by 2040” pledge that their own Chief Sustainability Officer later called an aspiration, not a promise. And now, JBS is seeking to list on the New York Stock Exchange, via a Dutch shell company. The move raises serious questions about transparency and accountability. If approved, the restructuring would grant the Batista family over 85% of voting rights. This isn’t climate leadership. It’s corporate consolidation at the expense of people, planet, and public trust.
It’s time to start recognising JBS for what it is: a nature and climate supervillain with a business model rooted in exploitation, devastation and oppression. We are standing at a climate tipping point. Methane is a fast-acting, planet-heating gas, and JBS is emitting it at staggering levels. If their listing on the NYSE is approved, investors won’t just be buying shares. They’ll be underwriting the continued destruction of the Amazon, other vital ecosystems and the acceleration of climate collapse.
It’s no longer about awareness; we’ve had more than enough. If you believe the Amazon deserves a future, the real question is: what will you do now?
Ask political leaders to act on their promises to stop Amazon destruction.
Take actionAlessandro Saccoccio is the Respect the Amazon Project Lead at Greenpeace International.
From a powerful projection in California to one in downtown Toronto, here are a few of our favourite images from Greenpeace’s work around the world this week.
USA – At nightfall in California, Greenpeace USA projected a powerful message of purpose and defiance onto the Marin Headlands, facing the Golden Gate Bridge. The action marked 100 days into the administration’s second term and launched the global #TimeToResist campaign — a call to push back against attacks on democracy, dissent, and environmental justice from billionaire oligarchs and corporate bullies.
Brazil – Greenpeace Brazil’s activists have taken action against JBS, the world’s biggest meat company, disrupting their annual shareholder meeting at the company’s headquarters in São Paulo. They are protesting the company’s role in environmental destruction and climate breakdown, including deforestation in the Amazon.
Canada – Ahead of the federal election, Greenpeace Canada’s activists projected powerful messages in downtown Toronto near the CN Tower.
Messages included: “Don’t Trump Canada”, “Solar Panels not Pipelines”, “Land Back not Land Grabs”, “Healthcare not Transphobia”, “Peace not War”, “RESIST” and “TimetoResist” among others.
Greenpeace Canada is calling out politicians like Trump and Poilievre, and billionaires like Musk, Zuckerberg and Bezos for spreading fear and division. At the same time that polluting industries like oil & gas seek to take advantage of the crisis they helped create.
Greenpeace Canada is asking Poilievre and all political parties to protect people and the environment, not polluters and billionaires. This projection was also a solidarity statement in support of Greenpeace US, who has been found liable for more than US$660 million in the Energy Transfer SLAPP trial.
Germany – Greenpeace will be represented at the Evening of Encounter at the Kirchentag 2025 in Hannover with a stand on the topic of the billionaires’ tax. Visitors can vote hypothetically on symbolic 1 billion euro bills on how they would like to use the revenue from a billionaire’s tax for climate protection. The filled-in banknotes will be attached to a 2-metre heart, which picks up on the Kirchentag motto “courageous, strong, courageous”. Engagement-led activity addressing the political power and influence of a small super-rich elite at a mass event in Hannover (the biggest church convention in Germany). #timetoresist
Greenpeace Netherlands activists staged a protest at the Council of Ministers with a banner reading ‘See you in court’ to warn about the consequences of failing to meet climate commitments. In October, the Bonaire Climate Case will go to court, in which Greenpeace and residents of Bonaire are suing the Dutch government to demand protection against climate change. According to Greenpeace, the cabinet is stalling—just like it did with the nitrogen crisis—while delay is not an option for Bonaire. Among other demands, Greenpeace insists that the Netherlands must finally meet its own climate target of a 55% reduction in CO₂ emissions by 2030.
France – Greenpeace France volunteers in Paris support the INC5 warriors
“Bring our activists home” – activists from Greenpeace France protest in front of the Consulate of the Republic of Korea and the Eiffel Tower in solidarity with Greenpeace International activists who were forced to stay in South Korea.
The action is part of a worldwide campaign in support of the five Greenpeace activists who are on trial for their non-violent campaign against environmental injustice. Five activists from Germany, the UK, Mexico, Taiwan and the Netherlands were prevented from travelling home after a peaceful protest action in November 2024.
Norway – Time to Resist the Billionaire Takeover – Protest in Svalbard
Stop the billionaire takeover protest in Svalbard in front of Mark Zuckerberg’s luxury yacht, Launchpad. During his first 100 days in office, Donald Trump has set about dismantling environmental and climate protections and democratic principles, and attacking those who speak up against the corporate profits of and overreach of his billionaire friends. Billionaires and corporations are taking control of our rights and freedoms. Using their vast fortunes, they lobby to weaken regulations meant to protect people and the planet, fund candidates who serve their interests, and gain control of the media to shape the stories we hear.
Greenpeace has been a pioneer of photo activism for more than 50 years, and remains committed to bearing witness and exposing environmental injustice through the images we capture.
To see more Greenpeace Photo and Video, please visit our Media Library.
Amsterdam, Netherlands – Marking the first 100 days of US President Donald Trump’s second term, Greenpeace organisations around the world staged protests against the billionaire and corporate takeover of people’s rights and freedom – from Trump’s golf course in Scotland and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s yacht in the Arctic, to the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco and the home of the US Constitution in Washington DC.
Greenpeace USA, one of three Greenpeace entities targeted in the abusive $660million lawsuit by the fossil fuel pipeline company Energy Transfer, has unfurled a banner reading “We the People: Preserve, Protect, Defend” in front of the US Constitution display at the National Archives.
Dr. Folabi Olagbaju, Democracy Campaign Director, Greenpeace USA, said: “Greenpeace’s mission has always been to preserve, protect, and defend our just green world and today, that means defending the very document that makes this critical advocacy work possible. ‘We the People’ is a phrase that belongs to all of us… it is not owned by corporations, or billionaires, or politicians. As the constitutional rights to free speech and due process come under attack on university campuses, in major law firms, and even inside legacy journalism institutions, Greenpeace USA is making clear that our fight is not just about defending the environment and safeguarding climate: it’s about defending democracy itself.
“We are here to remind this administration, and the nation, that constitutional rights belong to the people. Free speech, protest, and dissent are not negotiable. They are the foundation of any livable future, and we will resist any effort to erase them.”
In the 100 Days, the president has not only left the Paris Climate agreement and offered Alaskan wilderness to oil drilling, he has also opened up pristine marine ecosystems in the Pacific to industrial fishing and wants to launch deep sea mining in US and International waters. Moreover, he has ended investments in clean energy and instead boosted coal, oil and fossil gas by weakening regulations and removing obstacles for the fossil fuel industry.[1][2][3][4]
Greenpeace UK revealed a 55m by 40m artwork on the beach next to Trump’s golf course in Scotland, ‘Trump Turnberry’, showing a giant portrait of the U.S. President raked into the sand with the message: “Time to resist – fight the billionaire takeover”.
Areeba Hamid, Co-Executive Director, Greenpeace UK said: “During his first 100 days President Trump has been actively working to dismantle and weaken environmental protections and attack those who fight to protect nature and our shared climate, putting the corporate profits of his billionaire friends ahead of people and the planet. It’s time to resist the billionaire takeover of our rights and freedoms.”
Greenpeace Nordic joined a protest in the harbour of the world’s most northern town, Longyearbyen in Svalbard, as Zuckerberg’s US$ 300 million dollar yacht arrived.
Halvard Raavand, Deputy Program Manager, Greenpeace Norway said: “Trump’s biggest allies are a group of unelected billionaires, including the tech billionaires. This is not just about one luxury yacht. It’s about how powerful billionaires like Zuckerberg bend to and support Trump and undermine the climate fight – both through extreme consumption and by facilitating the spread of disinformation about climate.
Volunteers from Greenpeace Mexico gathered in Mexico City at the Plaza of the Three Cultures — a symbol of Mexico’s pre-Hispanic, colonial, and modern history, as well as an emblem of resistance and social memory — to project the faces of those truly responsible for the climate crisis: the billionaires.
Activists have also been subvertising bus stops around the US embassies around the world, including in England, the Netherlands, and Denmark, with posters carrying the same messaging: Time to resist: Fight the billionaire takeover.
ENDS
Photos and videos can be found in the Greenpeace Media Library
Notes:
1. Trump’s under-the-radar Alaska order has environmentalists on edge https://edition.cnn.com/2025/02/03/business/trump-alaska-executive-order-environment/index.html
2. Trump opens massive marine protected area to commercial fishing https://news.mongabay.com/short-article/trump-opens-massive-marine-protected-area-to-commercial-fishing
3. US government confirms their support for deep sea mining plans that bypass United Nations https://www.greenpeace.org/usa/us-government-confirms-their-support-for-deep-sea-mining-plans-that-bypass-united-nations-greenpeace-response
4. Green energy supporters pushed for faster permitting. Trump is doing it, but not for solar or wind https://apnews.com/article/trump-energy-fossil-fuels-wind-solar-oil-gas-interior-37adf6b10ed88c293844c6c8673058d8
Contact:
Greenpeace International Press Desk, +31 (0)20 718 2470 (available 24 hours), pressdesk.int@greenpeace.org
Across the world, right now, billionaires, oligarchs, and corporations are using their wealth to silence dissent, undo decades of social and environmental progress, and manipulate the game in their favour.
In the first 100 days of his second term, President Trump has actively dismantled and weakened environmental protection and gone after those who fight to protect our nature and climate, with relentless attacks on democratic institutions and public protections, putting corporate profits and power for him and his billionaire friends ahead of people and planet and our future.
The Trump administration has not only left the Paris Climate agreement and offered Alaskan wilderness to oil drilling. He has also opened up pristine and protected marine ecosystems in the Pacific to industrial fishing and wants to launch deep sea mining in US and International waters. And while he exempted oil and gas products from the universal tariff earlier in April, he has ended investments in clean energy and instead boosted coal, oil and gas by weakening regulations and removing obstacles to the fossil fuel industry. [1]
Trump’s biggest allies are a handful of billionaires, and the fossil fuel companies who are knowingly burning the planet, polluting our waters, and hurting families and communities around the world. These corporate bullies will stop at nothing to keep their oil and gas empire alive – even weaponising the legal system to crush dissent and silence environmental activism.
A key weapon being used by the oligarchy against those advocating for a green, just future is SLAPP lawsuits, like the one waged against Greenpeace in the US and Greenpeace International by the fossil fuel pipeline giant Energy Transfer – a company headed by billionaire and Trump donor Kelcy Warren. In a deeply disappointing verdict, a US jury found Greenpeace International and Greenpeace in the US liable for over $660 million to Energy Transfer.
For the billionaires and big oil companies, this is not about the money. They simply want to silence the uncomfortable truth: their business models are the root cause of climate change and environmental destruction.
Make no mistake: this is a direct attack on our rights and freedoms, on the climate movement and peaceful protest. But we will fight back. Our supporters and allies number in the millions, and fight environmental polluters in every corner of the world. Neither a fossil fuel company nor any other corporate bully will silence us.
100 days have gone by. The next 100 days are time for action: it is time to resist Trump and his billionaire bullies. Will you join us?
It’s time to resist – starting today. So will you join the fight against the billionaire takeover?
Sign the PledgeDaniel Bengtsson is the Head of Communications for Greenpeace Nordic.
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