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a must read..this is crazy

November 19th 2007 04:16
I just came accross this article about Biofuels. It is well documented that I am all for alternative fuels and even people making money out of the environment as long as it is a net net positive...but this situation highlighted by leading journalist George Monbiot is a by product of a system that is just crazy: People is Swaziland are starving and the Government is producing Bio-fuels using one of their staple crops......

common sense people please.....greed never ceases to astound me, Read on or CLICK HERE



Biofuels could kill more people than the Iraq war.


By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 6th November 2007

It doesn’t get madder than this. Swaziland is in the grip of a famine and receiving emergency food aid. Forty per cent of its people are facing acute food shortages. So what has the government decided to export? Biofuel made from one of its staple crops, cassava(1). The government has allocated several thousand hectares of farmland to ethanol production in the county of Lavumisa, which happens to be the place worst hit by drought(2). It would surely be quicker and more humane to refine the Swazi people and put them in our tanks. Doubtless a team of development consultants is already doing the sums.

This is one of many examples of a trade described last month by Jean Ziegler, the UN’s special rapporteur, as “a crime against humanity”(3). Ziegler took up the call first made by this column for a five-year moratorium on all government targets and incentives for biofuel(4): the trade should be frozen until second-generation fuels - made from wood or straw or waste - become commercially available. Otherwise the superior purchasing power of drivers in the rich world means that they will snatch food from people’s mouths. Run your car on virgin biofuel and other people will starve.


Even the International Monetary Fund, always ready to immolate the poor on the altar of business, now warns that using food to produce biofuels “might further strain already tight supplies of arable land and water all over the world, thereby pushing food prices up even further.”(5) This week the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation will announce the lowest global food reserves in 25 years, threatening what it calls “a very serious crisis”(6). Even when the price of food was low, 850 million people went hungry because they could not afford to buy it. With every increment in the price of flour or grain, several million more are pushed below the breadline.

The cost of rice has risen by 20% over the past year, maize by 50%, wheat by 100%(7). Biofuels aren’t entirely to blame - by taking land out of food production they exacerbate the effects of bad harvests and rising demand - but almost all the major agencies are now warning against expansion. And almost all the major governments are ignoring them.

They turn away because biofuels offer a means of avoiding hard political choices. They create the impression that governments can cut carbon emissions and - as Ruth Kelly, the British transport secretary, announced last week(8) - keep expanding the transport networks. New figures show that British drivers puttered past the 500 billion kilometre mark for the first time last year(9). But it doesn’t matter: we just have to change the fuel we use. No one has to be confronted. The demands of the motoring lobby and the business groups clamouring for new infrastructure can be met. The people being pushed off their land remain unheard.

In principle, burning biofuels merely releases the carbon they accumulated when they were growing. Even when you take into account the energy costs of harvesting, refining and transporting the fuel, they produce less net carbon than petroleum products. The law the British government passed a fortnight ago - by 2010, 5% of our road transport fuel must come from crops(10) - will, it claims, save between 700,000 and 800,000 tonnes of carbon a year(11). It derives this figure by framing the question carefully. If you count only the immediate carbon costs of planting and processing biofuels, they appear to reduce greenhouse gases. When you look at the total impacts, you find that they cause more warming than petroleum.

A recent study by the Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen shows that the official estimates have ignored the contribution of nitrogen fertilisers. They generate a greenhouse gas - nitrous oxide - which is 296 times as powerful as CO2. These emissions alone ensure that ethanol from maize causes between 0.9 and 1.5 times as much warming as petrol, while rapeseed oil (the source of over 80% of the world’s biodiesel) generates 1-1.7 times the impact of diesel(12). This is before you account for the changes in land use.

A paper published in Science three months ago suggests that protecting uncultivated land saves, over 30 years, between two and nine times the carbon emissions you might avoid by ploughing it and planting biofuels(13). Last year the research group LMC International estimated that if the British and European target of a 5% contribution from biofuels were to be adopted by the rest of the world, the global acreage of cultivated land would expand by 15%(14). That means the end of most tropical forests. It might also cause runaway climate change.

The British government says it will strive to ensure that “only the most sustainable biofuels” will be used in the UK(15). It has no means of enforcing this aim - it admits that if it tried to impose a binding standard it would break world trade rules(16). But even if “sustainability” could be enforced, what exactly does it mean? You could, for example, ban palm oil from new plantations. This is the most destructive kind of biofuel, driving deforestation in Malaysia and Indonesia. But the ban would change nothing. As Carl Bek-Nielsen, vice chairman of Malaysia’s United Plantations Bhd, remarked, “even if it is another oil that goes into biodiesel, that other oil then needs to be replaced. Either way, there’s going to be a vacuum and palm oil can fill that vacuum.”(17) The knock-on effects cause the destruction you are trying to avoid. The only sustainable biofuel is recycled waste oil, but the available volumes are tiny(18).

At this point the biofuels industry starts shouting “jatropha!” It is not yet a swear word, but it soon will be. Jatropha is a tough weed with oily seeds that grows in the tropics. This summer Bob Geldof, who never misses an opportunity to promote simplistic solutions to complex problems, arrived in Swaziland in the role of “special adviser” to a biofuels firm. Because it can grow on marginal land, jatropha, he claimed, is a “life-changing” plant, which will offer jobs, cash crops and economic power to African smallholders(19).

Yes, it can grow on poor land and be cultivated by smallholders. But it can also grow on fertile land and be cultivated by largeholders. If there is one blindingly obvious fact about biofuel it’s that it is not a smallholder crop. It is an internationally-traded commodity which travels well and can be stored indefinitely, with no premium for local or organic produce. Already the Indian government is planning 14m hectares of jatropha plantations(20). In August the first riots took place among the peasant farmers being driven off the land to make way for them(21).

If the governments promoting biofuels do not reverse their policies, the humanitarian impact will be greater than that of the Iraq war. Millions will be displaced, hundreds of millions more could go hungry. This crime against humanity is a complex one, but that neither lessens nor excuses it. If people starve because of biofuels, Ruth Kelly and her peers will have killed them. Like all such crimes it is perpetrated by cowards, attacking the weak to avoid confronting the strong.

www.monbiot.com

References:

1. IRIN Africa, 25th October 2007. Swaziland: Food or biofuel seems to be the question. Really Long Link

2. Energy Current, 29th October 2007. Swaziland joins biofuel drive despite mounting food crisis. Really Long Link

3. Grant Ferrett, 27th October 2007. Biofuels ‘crime against humanity’. BBC Online.
Really Long Link

4. George Monbiot, 27th March 2007. A Lethal Solution. The Guardian.
Really Long Link

5. Valerie Mercer-Blackman, Hossein Samiei, and Kevin Cheng, 17th October 2007. Biofuel Demand Pushes Up Food Prices. IMF Research Department.
Really Long Link

6. Jacques Diouf, quoted by John Vidal, 3rd November 2007. Global food crisis looms as climate change and fuel shortages bite. The Guardian.

7. John Vidal, 3rd November 2007. Global food crisis looms as climate change and fuel shortages bite. The Guardian.

8. Department for Transport, October 2007. Towards a Sustainable Transport System:
Supporting Economic Growth in a Low Carbon World. Really Long Link

9. Department for Transport, 2007. Transport Statistics Great Britain 2007. Table 7.1. Road traffic by type of vehicle: 1949-2006
Really Long Link

10. HM Government, 2007. The Renewable Transport Fuel Obligations Order 2007. Really Long Link

11. Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, October 2007. Biofuels - risks and opportunities, p4. Really Long Link

12. PJ Crutzen, AR Mosier, KA Smith and W Winiwarter, 1 August 2007. N2O release from agro-biofuel production negates global warming reduction by replacing fossil fuels. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions 7, pp11191–11205. Really Long Link

13. Renton Righelato and Dominick V. Spracklen, 17th August 2007. Carbon Mitigation by Biofuels or by Saving and Restoring Forests? Science Vol 317, p902. doi 10.1126/science.1141361.

14. AFP, 17th October 2007. IMF concerned by impact of biofuels on food prices. Really Long Link

15. Lord Bassam of Brighton, 29th March 2007. Parliamentary answer. Column WA310. Really Long Link

16. Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, October 2007. Biofuels - risks and opportunities, p5. Really Long Link

17. Benjamin Low, 24th February 2006. CPO Prices Seen Up In 06 As Biodiesel Fuels Demand
Really Long Link

18. You can see the calculations here: Really Long Link

19. Helene Le Roux, 27th July 2007. Singer, songwriter and activist promotes green energy in Africa. Engineering News Online. Really Long Link

20. John Vidal, ibid.

21. Mark Olden, 25th October 2007. Observations on: biofuels. New Statesman.
Really Long Link
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Comments
18 Comments. [ Add A Comment ]

Comment by katyzzz

November 19th 2007 04:43
I'll take your word for it Louie, hate doing homework.

Comment by Krystal

November 19th 2007 05:51
My head is too stuffed with other things, I need some of katyzzz brain exercises I think. But you seem to know what you're doing Louie.

Comment by Louie

November 19th 2007 05:55
Ok Krystal and Katiezz consider it done.

Comment by Lilla

November 19th 2007 06:05
Hey Louie,

You'll be pleased to know that the Ethanol Biofool industry in US has gone belly up at the last count, due to the rise in costs of production.

It was finally decided that the food was better eaten.

*being sarcastic* Aah so sad, the SUV's will have to run on something else.

I thought it great news, personally.*chuckle*

Lilla ...

Comment by Louie

November 19th 2007 06:08
Lilla, couldn't agree more, most exciting is the Second Generation of fuels are getting close to being commercial..eventually all compost will be theoreticaly able to become fuel, so our waste will come to something productive....now to train people to separate it...my partner runs a coy that tries to educate people on this, you wold be srprised how many people fight to take the responsibility to remember to separate food waste from other...they say it too hard to remember, paper is one tihng...come on people

Comment by Rosemary

November 19th 2007 09:21
Sadly I think the big bucks will come first. Always do. There's just no money in supporting poor people.

Comment by Michaelie

November 19th 2007 09:56
God, how pathetic and senseless!

Michaelie

Comment by Louie

November 20th 2007 00:03
rosemary I think you are right but the big bucks need to take the poor people into consideration......

Comment by Louie

November 20th 2007 00:03
Michaelie, i couldnt agree with you more, stupid and senslesshits the nail on the head...

Comment by Cibbuano

November 20th 2007 02:13
I'm still undecided on the merits of biofuel... I've seen competing research that contradicts whether or not there's a net energy gain from using it...

Comment by Wynona Lavota

November 20th 2007 03:02
Mmm I haven't been amused with Swaziland for some time now, I mean it's King took $5 million that was raised by charities for HIV/AIDS relief and used it to build a personal runway.

Comment by Louie

November 20th 2007 03:10
Cibby, Yes you are right there is mountains of conflicting data out there.....eve nscientists get confused i think, that is why I prefer to stay away.

Comment by Louie

November 20th 2007 03:11
Wynona, i had no idea the King of Swaziland did that, figures I guess....he is a King and needs a run way, forget those poor dying/starving kids with no HIV treatments....disgusting....

cheers

Louie

Comment by Ahmed

November 20th 2007 04:53
haha, well Swaziland is a home for the corrupt, one way or another that biofuel would be used to make money fo the king, so it really doesn't matter, it never was with good intention.

Personally I'm not that big of a fan of biofuel, I think we should focus on other things like hydrogen power which is making some really promising gains.

Comment by Aimzster

November 20th 2007 09:27
This one's a laugh - Defending the government's stance, Sipho Mthetfwa, an agriculture extension officer in Shiselweni Region, said the government needs to develop industry and new markets so people can collect wages and buy food, given that agriculture could not be depended upon to resolve the country's economic woes.

With governments like these, is it any wonder that countries like Swaziland continue to face starvation and water storage? As Rosemary pointed out, big bucks override any common sense and trace of humanity which is truly sickening - just look at what's happening with the massacre of dolphins and endangered hump-back whales in Japan under the pretense of 'industrial commerce'. Blah!

Comment by Mike Crowl

November 20th 2007 22:09
I was at the Science Museum in London last week: they had a display showing how human excrement - poo, in other words - could well become one of the 'fuels' of the future. At present it's being almost completely wasted.

Comment by Louie

November 20th 2007 22:13
Aimzster I couldn't agree with you more, what makes me angry about the Whales/Dolphin episode is that they are making criminals out of perfectly good people....actually no, dont get me started on that one

Comment by Louie

November 20th 2007 22:16
hehehe Mike as disgusting as that sounds there is coy listing on the UK stock exchange in a few weeks that is trying to commercialise a Technology called Cellulosic Ethanol - basically they create Biofuels from ANYTHING includung human waste....this is the kind of Tech we need to back, imagine the world if we could put all the sht to good use then again sme countries use it for Fertiliser but first world countries waste a lot of great poo

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