The Soy Line
The Architecture Mapped, the Voluntary Governance Assessed, the EUDR Examined, and the Question the Chain Has Never Had to Answer
The Line Declared
Four posts. One commodity. Four trading companies whose integrated control is the governance. A voluntary standard that reduced Amazon-linked deforestation from 30% to under 2% in compliant chains — and excluded the biome with higher biodiversity than the Amazon from its scope throughout. A Mato Grosso tax law that converted commercial inconvenience into financial cost and ended the standard in one legislative session. An EU regulation positioned as the mandatory replacement, facing implementation challenges that may produce gaps as structural as the moratorium's Cerrado exclusion. This post synthesizes the series, declares the FSA four-layer map, connects The Soy Line to the broader FSA archive, states the normative debate fairly, and closes with the full Wall — and the question the chain has never been required to answer in any forum where the answer is binding.
The image that opens every post in this series shows a red dirt road running diagonally across an aerial frame — forest left, soy field right, the boundary between them as geometrically precise as a property survey. The road is the line. It separates what has been cleared from what has not yet been cleared. It is also the line the Amazon Soy Moratorium drew — the boundary the traders agreed to honor, on one side of which their purchases were acceptable and on the other side of which they were not. The moratorium's line and the boundary in the photograph are not the same line: the photograph shows a specific clearing event, the moratorium drew a temporal cutoff. But they share a structural logic: someone decided where the boundary runs, and the decision was made by the entity with the most to gain from placing the boundary where it was placed rather than somewhere else. The chain drew the line. The chain moved the frontier to where the line was not drawn. The chain is now withdrawing the line. The forest on the left side of that road exists because of decisions someone made. Those decisions were made by the entities this series has documented.
The Four Layers — Full Declaration
What the Series Established, Post by Post
The EUDR: Mandatory Governance or the Next Voluntary Standard?
The EU Deforestation Regulation is the most significant mandatory governance instrument yet applied to the Brazilian soy supply chain. It requires that soy placed on the EU market come from land not deforested after December 31, 2020 — a cutoff twelve years later than the ASM's, covering a broader geographic scope, backed by legal penalties rather than voluntary commitment, and applying to all operators placing covered commodities on the EU market rather than just ABIOVE signatories. It is structurally different from the moratorium in the ways that matter most: it is mandatory, it has legal force, and it cannot be withdrawn by the traders whose purchasing behavior it governs.
The FSA method notes these differences without overstating them. The EUDR faces implementation challenges that are structural rather than merely administrative. Traceability to the farm level — required for compliance verification — is technically demanding across the indirect supplier chains that were a documented gap in the ASM's monitoring architecture. Brazil has politically contested the EUDR's requirements, and implementation has already been delayed. Most significantly: the EUDR covers land deforested after 2020. The Cerrado, where the majority of post-2008 soy expansion has occurred, contains substantial areas cleared before the 2020 cutoff that are now in production — meaning that the growth frontier the ASM left open is partially grandfathered into EUDR compliance. The mandatory regulation inherits part of the voluntary standard's gap.
The Normative Debate, Stated Fairly
The Amazon Soy Moratorium produced documented environmental outcomes that no Brazilian government policy of the same period matched. Between 2006 and the mid-2010s, a voluntary private agreement among commodity traders reduced soy-linked Amazon deforestation more effectively than the Forest Code's enforcement mechanisms, more effectively than federal environmental agency intervention, and more effectively than any international treaty provision — because no international treaty provision existed. The traders wrote the standard because the standard served their market access interests. That the motivation was commercial does not reduce the environmental benefit. The forest that was not cleared because of the ASM's blocking lists is not less valuable because the traders who maintained those lists did so for reputational reasons.
The Cerrado exclusion is defensible on pragmatic grounds: including the Cerrado in 2006 would have produced a standard so commercially costly that it might not have been adopted at all, or adopted only in weakened form. A moratorium that covered the Amazon and produced real outcomes was better than a theoretically comprehensive standard that collapsed before implementation. The partial coverage was the politically achievable version of conservation governance in a context where public governance had failed to provide any version at all.
The exit itself is defensible within the voluntary governance framework: the moratorium was voluntary. Its signatories were not legally bound to maintain it. When the Brazilian state government of the country's largest soy jurisdiction imposed financial penalties for adherence, the traders faced a genuine conflict between their voluntary commitments and their legal obligations in that jurisdiction. The EUDR provides a mandatory framework that will govern the EU-facing supply chain on terms the traders cannot withdraw from. The transition from voluntary to mandatory governance — however imperfect the mandatory instrument — is the direction the series has been moving toward. The exit from the moratorium is a step in that direction, not a retreat from it.
The FSA method's response holds these arguments against the specific evidence the series has documented: a Cerrado that has been cleared at accelerating rates throughout the moratorium's operation, an expansion frontier that has moved precisely to the biome the line did not cover, an exit triggered not by the availability of a stronger mandatory alternative but by a state tax law designed to remove the financial incentive for compliance, and a EUDR that grandfathers a significant share of the Cerrado expansion the ASM enabled. The normative case for the chain's governance is real. The evidence that it was designed to protect the growth frontier is equally real. Both are in the record.
Cross-Series Connections
The Full FSA Wall
The Amazon deforestation rate attributable to soy following ABIOVE's withdrawal has not been established as of this writing. The moratorium's collapse is recent. The environmental consequence — whether clearing returns toward pre-moratorium levels, stabilizes under EUDR and public enforcement pressure, or follows a different trajectory — will be established by monitoring data across the coming seasons. The wall runs at the post-withdrawal environmental record.
The proportion of post-2006 Cerrado expansion attributable to the ASM's geographic redirection of soy production — the leakage from the covered Amazon biome to the uncovered Cerrado — is debated in the academic literature without a definitive, independently verified accounting. The wall runs at the leakage attribution that would establish how much additional Cerrado clearing resulted from the moratorium's deliberate boundary.
Whether the EU Deforestation Regulation will function as genuine mandatory replacement governance for the supply chain's deforestation footprint — or whether its traceability challenges, political pressures from supplier countries, and 2020 cutoff that grandfathers existing Cerrado production will produce a partial instrument with gaps analogous to the ASM — is not established. The regulation's operational record will determine this. The wall runs at the implementation outcome the coming years will produce.
The specific financial instruments through which ABCD traders structure Brazilian soy trade through Singapore subsidiaries — the intercompany pricing, tax optimization mechanisms, and forward contract structures — are not in the public record. The practice is documented as standard. The architecture is not. The wall runs at the intercompany financial records that would establish the governance significance of the Singapore hub beyond what company-level disclosures provide.
Where is the line, and who has the right to draw it? The Amazon Soy Moratorium drew a line. The entities that drew it also determined its location — and placed it where the growth frontier had already moved past. The EUDR draws a different line. No international treaty draws any line. In the absence of a binding multilateral instrument governing the supply chain's land-use footprint, the question of where the boundary between acceptable and unacceptable clearance runs is answered by whichever governance instrument is currently operational — and currently operational means currently commercially rational for the entities that wrote it. The wall runs at the binding answer to that question in a forum that does not yet exist.
The source layer is integrated value-chain control without public governance — four companies that finance, store, process, transport, and export the majority of the world's most traded agricultural commodity, operating in the absence of any binding international instrument governing their land-use footprint. The conduit is the chain from Mato Grosso field to Vietnamese feedlot, financially centered in Singapore, physically centered in Brazil. The conversion is the transformation of frontier land into ESG-credentialed commodity — or, after the moratorium's withdrawal, into commodity whose ESG credentials are transitioning to the next instrument. The insulation was the voluntary standard itself: written by the chain, administered by the chain, withdrawn by the chain, with no external authority to prevent any of those acts.
The red dirt road in the image that opens this series divides forest from field. It runs from the foreground to the horizon. On the left side of it: what has not yet been cleared. On the right side: what has. The Amazon Soy Moratorium drew a line like that road — temporal rather than spatial, but equally precise in what it left accessible. The line held for eighteen years. One state tax law removed the commercial incentive that held it. The line is gone. The frontier is open. The EUDR is drawing the next line. It grandfathers what the last line left accessible.
The chain runs. The frontier expands. The line moves. The question of who has the right to draw it — and in whose interest it is drawn — has never been answered in any forum where the answer is binding on the entities that draw it.
The field is on the right side of the road. The forest is still on the left. For now.
Series Sources — Consolidated
- USDA FAS — Brazil soybean production and export data (2024/25, 2025/26); fas.usda.gov
- ABIOVE — ASM documentation, annual monitoring reports, withdrawal announcement (2006–2026); abiove.org.br
- Greenpeace — "Eating Up the Amazon" (2006); campaign documentation
- Gibbs, Holly K.; et al. — "Brazil's Soy Moratorium," Science (2015)
- Nepstad, Daniel; et al. — "Slowing Amazon Deforestation through Public Policy," Science (2014)
- Murphy, Sophia; Burch, David; Clapp, Jennifer — "Cereal Secrets: The World's Largest Grain Traders," Oxfam (2012)
- Trase — supply chain transparency; Brazil soy deforestation linkages; trase.earth
- EU — Regulation (EU) 2023/1115 on deforestation-free products (EUDR); Official Journal
- Mato Grosso State Legislature — tax benefit legislation (2025); Brazilian legislative record
- Brazil PRODES / INPE — Amazon deforestation satellite monitoring; inpe.br
- Cerrado Working Group — Cerrado Manifesto; expansion documentation
- Bunge, Cargill, ADM, LDC — Annual Reports and sustainability reports (2022–2025)
- Clapp, Jennifer — Food (2016, updated 2020) — ABCD trader integration
- Brannstrom, Christian; et al. — Cerrado land change documentation, Journal of Land Use Science (2008)
- Mighty Earth; Greenpeace Brazil — ASM withdrawal analysis (2025–2026)
- COFCO International — Brazil operations documentation; cofcointernational.com



