Mirta María Velzi visits the grave of her daughter, who died from a brain tumor at age 17. Her father worked for years on farms exposed to multiple chemical substances. Entre Ríos, Argentina.
In 1996, Argentina radically reshaped its agricultural landscape by approving the use of genetically modified, herbicide resistant soybeans. This policy, adopted without independent domestic research, launched a transition that turned the country into a global laboratory for agro-industrial expansion. Since the adoption of this model, pesticide use has escalated significantly; while initial figures stood at roughly 40 million liters, projections and informal trade data now suggest a total annual volume exceeding 500 million liters. Today, nearly 60% of Argentina’s cultivated land is dedicated to GMO crops, a territory where approximately 14 million people live in close proximity to intensive spraying zones.
The human toll of this chemical-intensive model is recorded in severe health crises across agricultural provinces like Chaco, Misiones, and Entre Ríos. For many years, independent scientific studies and networks of rural doctors have established correlation between agrochemical exposure and chronic illness. In some of these regions, pediatric cancer cases have tripled in a decade, and spontaneous miscarriages and congenital malformations are reported at rates three to four times higher than the national average. Despite these findings, the lack of a unifying national law to regulate herbicides allows toxic drift (the movement of airborne herbicides or pesticides away from their intended target) to reach within meters of human settlements.
Captured over a decade, this project documents the daily reality behind the statistics, focusing on the individual people bearing the weight of this economic strategy. These photographs are a record of the consequences of Argentina’s export-led model that prioritizes agro-industrial corporate profits over the health and lives of the country’s rural citizens.
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