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Lessons from the Amazon: How Sustainability Plays a Big Role in Tropical Açaí's SuccessTropical Açaí, a vertically integrated acai supplier, cares for the environment, its employees, and its community. He gathers the berries in a basket made from the leaves and stems of the açaí tree, to be transported by riverboat to a small family farm in the city of Inhangapi. Here they'll be crushed, pitted, and pulped in a processing facility powered by biofuel produced using the seeds of the açaí. This Amazon local, an indiginous native, will receive a percentage of the berries he harvests along with his wage. In this small city where the profitability of the açaí industry has increased exponentially in the last two decades, both the locals and government have benefitted from new community gardens, raised standards of living, and increased biodiversity. During a time when sustainability is marketable and greenwashing is common practice, Tropical Açaí does the good work for the best reason: because they care. Açaí (pronounced as ah-sigh-EE) has exploded in popularity in the US in the last ten years. Much more than just a trendy health food boasting of Omega-6, lipids, anthocyanins, amino acids, calcium, proteins, and antioxidants, açaí fruit has been a regional diet staple of the indigenous floodplain tribes since before recorded history. Brazilian folklore tells of the Amazon being born from a single seed of açaí. Açaí is a filling, savory, and ubiquitous dish valued by all local families in northern Any industry can develop labor and supply chain issues, but with the proper employers, growing, harvesting, and transporting açaí can be a profitable occupation for the rural indiginous population. Tropical Açaí is one of those employers. Tropical Açaí Tropical Açaí is a vertically integrated company that controls all steps of its farming, supply, production, manufacturing, and exportation. Their açaí is Certified USDA and IBD Organic, Non-GMO, Non-Dairy, Vegan, Certified Kosher, and holds the FSSC 22000 Food Safety Certification, a globally recognized standard that addresses food safety and quality. Their farm, located in Inhangapi, Pará in the northern region of Ribeirinho harvesters keep a percentage of the berries they harvest. Farm workers make jewelry from açaí seeds, and these bracelets and necklaces are sold in the US for non-profit. 100% of the proceeds are given to the crafters in The company hosts presentations, seminars, and training on topics from organic farming and ecology to health and hygiene, even providing trips to seminars in large cities such as Tropical Açaí supports all pillars of sustainability (environmental, social, and economic) through their integrated business practices and cares for the environment in addition to their employees and community. They've taken remarkable steps to make their processing facility have little to no negative effect on the Amazon rainforest while promoting local reforestation, development, and diversity. Environment and Biodiversity The land that the farm that supplies Tropical Açaí bought was previously deforested and partially served as a farm for black pepper, a non-native plant that required energy-intensive irrigation methods. The monoculture of black pepper damaged the soil and altered the natural biodiversity that existed. Monoculture as an agricultural process leads to a decrease in species richness, which leads to a decreased crop yield due to lack of pollinators and biological pest controllers and a dangerous cycle of attempting to boost yield with artificial fertilizers and pesticides. Black pepper is not the only devastating monoculture crop in this region. Cattle ranching and soy cultivation, as well as gold mining and logging, all lend a hand in the Amazon's destruction. Deforestation has continued to surge in Pará in recent years, reaching a 12-year high. The farm replanted açaí trees (Euterpe oleracea) and returned to natural and traditional agricultural systems. The açaí grown on the farm is native to the floodplains of the Amazon region and is irrigated naturally by the tides and rains. The palms also get extra fertilizer from the palm leaves left on the ground during trimming. When a palm is overgrown, the plant is pruned for vitalization and new branches grow in place of the old. The old palm branches are harvested for the heart of palm, or palmito, they contain inside, a hearty fibrous vegetable enjoyed by locals, while the palm leaves are left to decompose. Using these traditional harvesting, irrigation, and fertilization techniques has revitalized natural biodiversity in the area. No pesticides are necessary for the farm that supplies Tropical Açaí because pest controllers and insects have returned, and the bee population in the area has surged once again. Other native trees now grow within the farm too, promoting reforestation and improving harvest. Despite being a native Amazon plant, açaí is now grown as a monoculture by large corporations using industrial irrigation systems, pesticides, GMOs, and nitrogen-infused fertilizers due to growing demand for the fruit from the US. This not only disrupts the natural biodiversity of the area but interrupts the delivery of the nutrient-rich soil (which provides açaí with some of its superfood characteristics) and results in lower quality açaí. When açaí farms grow patches of açaí trees surrounded by forests, those plants produce more fruit per clump than the açaí trees planted in monoculture farms. Tropical Açaí uses a high quality manufacturing process, meaning there is no pulp and water separation. Recently the company started using the açaí seeds as a source of biofuel, providing energy for their processing machines. Prior to this implementation, they sold the seeds to be used for biofuel for a nearby mud roofing company from the beginning of their operations, and still sell their surplus seeds to this facility. The seeds are also used to make jewelry, and the leaves and stems of the açaí are used for making rafters of roofs and building materials, as well as hats, brooms, and baskets. Oftentimes in the US, we don't know where food comes from, how it's made, or who worked to get it from farm to plate. When it comes to marketing açaí as a health food, many companies can claim to be traditional and natural while maintaining a berry supply from monoculture farms that harm the environment. According to Renata Prates, CEO of Tropical Açaí, the company's focus is "to not only provide the best açaí to the Tropical Acai contact sales@tropicalacai.com
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