Into Dust

Brazil's Charcoal Workers

  • ABrazilPollution001.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution002.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution003.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution004.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution005.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution006.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution007.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution008.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution009.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution010.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution011.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution012.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution013.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution014.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution015.JPG
  • ABrazilPollution016.JPG

In Brazil's inland state of Maranhão, charcoal workers endure tortuous conditions, poor health, debt burdens, and long hours for little pay. Both the workers and the earth suffer where illegally felled trees are burned into charcoal. Nearby towns are covered in the soot from the earthen kilns and lung ailments among the population are common. Elders hope that the next generation will not have to work "in the smoke."