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The New Biofuel Republics

press-release

Tue, 07 Mar 2006 14:28:58 +0000

 

 

The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/NBR.php

========================================================

 

 

ISIS Press Release 07/03/06

 

The New Biofuel Republics

*********************

 

Poor developing nations are to feed the voracious appetites

of rich countries for biofuels instead of their own hungry

masses, and suffer the devastation of their natural forests

and biodiversity. Dr. Elizabeth Bravo and Dr. Mae-Wan Ho

 

A fully referenced version of this article is posted on ISIS

members' website http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/NBRFull.php.

Details here http://www.i-sis.org.uk/membership.php

 

The next European colonisation has begun

 

The end of cheap oil and the impending fuel crisis have

convinced the European Union and the United States to

seriously tackle their long-standing and worsening

" addiction to oil " , not by kicking the habit, but by

guzzling biofuels instead. These " carbon neutral " fuels –

biodiesel or bioethanol - make even committed

environmentalists feel good about getting into their SUVs,

as they do not contribute to carbon emissions. Burning

biofuels simply sends back into the atmosphere carbon

dioxide that the plants took out when they were growing in

the field. The snag is that there simply isn't sufficient

arable land on which to grow all the biofuel crops needed to

satisfy the voracious appetites of the industrialised

nations.

 

So, the next phase of colonisation has begun. The

industrialised countries are looking to the Third World to

feed their addiction: the land is there for the taking as is

cheap labour, and the environmental damages of large

plantations, biofuels extraction and refining can all be

outsourced, exactly as they were in the extraction of crude

oil. Brazil is already currently the main supplier of

bioethanol to the United Kingdom.

 

 

 

-------------------

 

Global warming is accelerating and energy prices are

soaring. We have to find the right survival strategies, and

we have to find them now. Time and energy resources are both

running out; squander them on the wrong technologies and the

consequences will be catastrophic, invest in the right

options and we can mitigate climate change and thrive in a

post fossil fuel world.

 

This report will help you make the right choices among

nuclear, biofuels, wind, solar, energy from wastes, and

more…

 

Send it to your policy-makers to input to the global energy

debate. Sponsor this report by making a donation that will

entitle you to multiple copies at print price plus p & p. For

details please e-mail: energy

 

Individual copies are available for pre-order at the ISIS

online store

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/onlinestore/books.php#238

 

-------------------

 

Companies dedicated to biodiesel have set their sights on

countries in Latin America, Africa, Asia and the Pacific,

where they can also obtain raw material at competitive

prices.

 

UK-based DI Oils predicted in 2004 that the world market for

biodiesel would grow by 14.5 percent annually to 2.79

million tonnes by 2010. The Asia Pacific operations of the

company, based in Manila, will provide the Philippine

Coconut Authority with the opportunity to meet the surge in

biodiesel demand from Japan, China, Korea, Taiwan and

Australia.

 

DI Oils has fastened on jatropha, a fast-growing, high-

yielding tree that can be planted in semi-tropical areas on

" wasteland and irrigated with sewerage water " . According to

its CEO, the company already has plantations totalling 267

000 Ha in Ghana, Madagascar, South Africa, India and the

Philippines, and intends to expand to 9 million ha. The

Indian government announced a national biodiesel purchase

policy in October 2005 that would enable farmers and

biodiesel producers to get a support price of Rs 25 per

litre for jatropha oil, and intends to bring one million ha

of land under jatropha cultivation to supply blended diesel

within the next few years.

 

Biodiesel has also provided a much-needed outlet for the

glut of genetically modified (GM) crops that consumers are

rejecting worldwide.

 

President Lula of Brazil has declared that GM soya is to be

used for biofuels and " good soya " for human consumption.

Argentina also has plans to transform GM soya into

biodiesel.

 

The biodiesel industry says that for processing biofuels,

large refining plants have to be constructed close to

agricultural areas or forests, where the raw material is

grown. The biodiesel will then have to be transported to

filling stations in the same way as oil.

 

The oil industry will want to maintain control over the

distribution of fuels, and will enter into an agreement with

these new companies, as in many cases the supply chain can

be very complex.

 

Everybody wins?

 

Biodiesel is projected as a business in which everybody

wins. The European emissions of CO2 decreases, and third

world countries increase their exports and improve the

quality of life of their rural populations.

 

The reality is something else. It is said that during the

growth of the crop, the plants absorb CO2 from the

atmosphere. This is true of what was growing before the

plantation was established. As the industry has plans of

expanding exponentially, it is likely that they will begin

to occupy primary or secondary forested areas, as has

already happened with the soya plantations. Soya plantations

have displaced the forests of el Chaco in Argentina and the

forests in Pantanal, Atlantic and Chaco areas in Paraguay.

Even more dramatically the Amazon, Pantanal, and Atlantic

forests in Brazil have all been cut down for soya. The net

CO2 balance is therefore strongly negative.

 

Additionally, other greenhouse gases are generated as a

product of the crop itself, the processing, refining,

transport and distribution of the fuel. It looks

increasingly likely that biofuels is a net contributor of

CO2 and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

 

As regards the benefits to the producers of the biofuel

crops, these can be extremely negative.

 

First, the destruction of forest and other original

vegetation has already happened; and if these crops were to

expand as intended, they could threaten food security and

food sovereignty of the local populations, because farmers

would stop producing food crops for the population and

instead concentrate on producing " clean fuels " for Europe.

 

The production of soya in Argentina could increase to 100

million tonnes, which involves a huge environmental and

social cost to the Argentinean people, such as the

displacement of rural populations, growing deforestation and

desertification of soils and hence greater hunger and social

inequity.

 

Large-scale agriculture, such as is needed to comply with

the demand for biofuels is highly dependent on oil

derivatives such as fertilisers and pesticides, which, apart

from producing CO2 emissions, are highly polluting.

 

The predictions for Brazil are alarming, as this country

could become the world leader in the substitution of fossil

fuels with biofuels, with all the impacts this entails. In

Brazil, biofuels have been obtained so far from sugarcane,

but the expansion of soya will make the displacement of

sugarcane inevitable.

 

Recently, the Spanish government of Zapatero announced that

Repsol will install a biodiesel plant in León. It is

predicted that the raw material will be obtained from oily

crops and will come from regions where labour and land is

cheap and where GM crops are permitted, i.e., in the

Southern Hemisphere.

 

In other words, the poor developing nations will be forced

to feed the voracious appetites of rich countries for

biofuels at the expense of their own hungry masses and

suffer the devastation of their natural forests and

biodiversity.

 

 

 

========================================================

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/NBR.php

 

If you like this original article from the Institute of

Science in Society, and would like to continue receiving

articles of this calibre, please consider making a donation

or purchase on our website

 

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/donations.

 

ISIS is an independent, not-for-profit organisation

dedicated to providing critical public information on

cutting edge science, and to promoting social accountability

and ecological sustainability in science.

 

 

========================================================

CONTACT DETAILS

 

The Institute of Science in Society, PO Box 32097, London

NW1 OXR

 

telephone: [44 20 8452 2729] [44 20

7272 5636]

 

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

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