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I agree with most of what George Monbiot says in the following
article about the potential downside of biofuels as a solution to the problem of
climate change. But I think there is a place for biofuels as a stop gap until
better technologies have been developed and I think there may be a long-term
place for biofuels in a mix of different technologies. In particular, biofuels
derived from wastes such as straw, forest waste, waste paper or waste cardboard
would be much less objectionable than biofuels derived from crops that have been
specially grown for the purpose.
Gerry Wolff (2004-12-09)
FUEL FOR NOUGHT
The adoption of
biofuels would be a humanitarian and environmental disaster
George Monbiot
Tuesday November 23, 2004
The Guardian
If human beings were without sin, we would still live in an imperfect world.
Adam Smith's notion that by pursuing his own interest, a man "frequently
promotes that of ... society more effectually than when he really intends to
promote it", and Karl Marx's picture of a society in which "the free development
of each is the condition for the free development of all" are both mocked by one
obvious constraint. The world is finite. This means that when one group of
people pursues its own interests, it damages the interests of others.
It is hard to think of a better example than the current
enthusiasm for biofuels. These are made from plant oils or crop wastes or wood,
and can be used to run cars and buses and lorries. Burning them simply returns
to the atmosphere the carbon that the plants extracted while they were growing.
So switching from fossil fuels to biodiesel and bioalcohol is now being promoted
as the solution to climate change.
Next month, the British government will have to set a target for
the amount of transport fuel that will come from crops. The European Union wants
2% of the oil we use to be biodiesel by the end of next year, rising to 6% by
2010 and 20% by 2020. To try to meet these targets, the government has reduced
the tax on biofuels by 20p a litre, while the EU is paying farmers an extra €45
a hectare to grow them.
Everyone seems happy about this. The farmers and the chemicals
industry can develop new markets, the government can meet its commitments to cut
carbon emissions, and environmentalists can celebrate the fact that plant fuels
reduce local pollution as well as global warming. Unlike hydrogen fuel cells,
biofuels can be deployed straightaway. This, in fact, was how Rudolf Diesel
expected his invention to be used. When he demonstrated his engine at the World
Exhibition in 1900, he ran it on peanut oil. "The use of vegetable oils for
engine fuels may seem insignificant today," he predicted. "But such oils may
become in course of time as important as petroleum." Some enthusiasts are
predicting that if fossil fuel prices continue to rise, he will soon be proved
right.
I hope not. Those who have been
promoting these fuels are well-intentioned, but wrong. They are wrong because
the world is finite. If biofuels take off, they will cause a global humanitarian
disaster.
Used as they are today, on a very
small scale, they do no harm. A few thousand greens in the United Kingdom are
running their cars on used chip fat. But recycled cooking oils could supply only
100,000 tonnes of diesel a year in this country, equivalent to one 380th of our
road transport fuel.
It might also be possible to turn
crop wastes such as wheat stubble into alcohol for use in cars - the Observer
ran an article about this on Sunday. I'd like to see the figures, but I find it
hard to believe that we will be able to extract more energy than we use in
transporting and processing straw. But the EU's plans, like those of all the
enthusiasts for biolocomotion, depend on growing crops specifically for fuel. As
soon as you examine the implications, you discover that the cure is as bad as
the disease.
Road transport in the UK consumes
37.6m tonnes of petroleum products a year. The most productive oil crop that can
be grown in this country is rape. The average yield is 3-3.5 tonnes per hectare.
One tonne of rapeseed produces 415kg of biodiesel. So every hectare of arable
land could provide 1.45 tonnes of transport fuel.
To run our cars and buses and
lorries on biodiesel, in other words, would require 25.9m hectares. There are
5.7m in the UK. Even the EU's more modest target of 20% by 2020 would consume
almost all our cropland.
If the same thing is to happen all
over Europe, the impact on global food supply will be catastrophic: big enough
to tip the global balance from net surplus to net deficit. If, as some
environmentalists demand, it is to happen worldwide, then most of the arable
surface of the planet will be deployed to produce food for cars, not people.
This prospect sounds, at first,
ridiculous. Surely if there were unmet demand for food, the market would ensure
that crops were used to feed people rather than vehicles? There is no basis for
this assumption. The market responds to money, not need. People who own cars
have more money than people at risk of starvation. In a contest between their
demand for fuel and poor people's demand for food, the car-owners win every
time. Something very much like this is happening already. Though 800 million
people are permanently malnourished, the global increase in crop production is
being used to feed animals: the number of livestock on earth has quintupled
since 1950. The reason is that those who buy meat and dairy products have more
purchasing power than those who buy only subsistence crops.
Green fuel is not just a
humanitarian disaster; it is also an environmental disaster. Those who worry
about the scale and intensity of today's agriculture should consider what
farming will look like when it is run by the oil industry. Moreover, if we try
to develop a market for rapeseed biodiesel in Europe, it will immediately
develop into a market for palm oil and soya oil. Oilpalm can produce four times
as much biodiesel per hectare as rape, and it is grown in places where labour is
cheap. Planting it is already one of the world's major causes of tropical forest
destruction. Soya has a lower oil yield than rape, but the oil is a by-product
of the manufacture of animal feed. A new market for it will stimulate an
industry that has already destroyed most of Brazil's cerrado (one of the world's
most biodiverse environments) and much of its rainforest.
It is shocking to see how narrow
the focus of some environmentalists can be. At a meeting in Paris last month, a
group of scientists and greens studying abrupt climate change decided that Tony
Blair's two big ideas - tackling global warming and helping Africa - could both
be met by turning Africa into a biofuel production zone. This strategy,
according to its convenor, "provides a sustainable development path for the many
African countries that can produce biofuels cheaply". I know the definition of
sustainable development has been changing, but I wasn't aware that it now
encompasses mass starvation and the eradication of tropical forests. Last year,
the British parliamentary committee on environment, food and rural affairs,
which is supposed to specialise in joined-up thinking, examined every possible
consequence of biofuel production - from rural incomes to skylark numbers -
except the impact on food supply.
We need a solution to the global
warming caused by cars, but this isn't it. If the production of biofuels is big
enough to affect climate change, it will be big enough to cause global
starvation.
www.monbiot.com
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