×

Truck traffic at Cargill facility in northern Brazil blocked by protesters

By Thomson Reuters Feb 2, 2026 | 9:46 AM

SAO PAULO, Feb 2 (Reuters) – Protesters have been blocking truck traffic at the entrance of Cargill’s Santarem ‍grain terminal in northern Brazil, according to a company statement in response to Reuters’ questions on Monday.

Cargill denied any occupation of its facilities by protesters, identified ‌by local media as ‌Indigenous groups.

Cargill’s Santarem terminal handles soybeans and corn.

According to news website G1, Indigenous people have been protesting at the site against ​a decree allowing dredging work on the Tapajos River, a key ‍export corridor for agricultural ​commodities.

Cargill said the protest began ​on January 22. In the statement, ‍the company noted it has “no control over” what the people are protesting against.

Most of the grain arrives at Cargill’s Santarem facility, in Para state, ‍by barge before being hauled onto ships for export, according to the company’s website.

A smaller ‍portion ‍of the grain that passes ​through the terminal is delivered ​by ⁠trucks, either directly from ‌the state of Mato Grosso, via the BR-163 highway, or from local farms, Cargill’s website says.

(Reporting by Ana Mano and Roberto Samora; Editing by Gabriel Araujo and ⁠Bill Berkrot)