http://www.theecologist.org/archive_detail.asp?content_id=834
Biofuels Report: Against the Grain
Plant fuels can never meet our current and growing energy needs and, 
as Robin Maynard reports, adopting a 'carbohydrate economy' may prove 
disastrous for our farmers, our food supply and our future
Date:01/03/2007         Author:Robin Maynard
 

Addressing the Conservative Party Conference in October 2006, the 
President of the National Farmers Union (NFU), Peter Kendall, was 
keen to impress upon delegates 'the key role' his members could play 
in tackling climate change.  Referring to how the country's farmers 
kept Britain fed when imports were blocked by German U-Boats, Kendall 
declared: 'Not since the Second World War has our land, our farming 
and our farmers been so important as a resource.'

In particular, he banged the drum for the large-scale planting of 
biofuel crops - these being the familiar crops of oilseed rape, 
sugar-beet and wheat, but which, rather than being used as human or 
animal foodstuffs, would be processed into fuel, namely biodiesel or 
bioethanol.



In seeking to ally his members' interests to those of the newly 
carbon-conscious Conservatives, Kendall clearly sees an opportunity 
to revive the reputation and fortunes of UK farmers. For decades, UK 
farming has stood accused of all manner of ills - of producing 
surpluses that swallowed up vast subsidies from UK taxpayers; of then 
dumping these surpluses on world markets, undercutting prices and 
destroying the livelihoods of poor farmers in the developing world; 
and of all the while ploughing up wildflower-rich meadows, decimating 
insects and other wildlife through indiscriminate pesticide use, and 
polluting rivers and under ground aquifers with fertiliser run-off. 
More accurately and justly, these ills should be laid at the door of 
the industrial end of agriculture and the agribusinesses constantly 
pushing the agrochemicals, pharmaceuticals and farm machinery that 
fuel intensive farming. Indeed, during those decades, it's not just 
wildlife, but hundreds of thousands of family farmers and 
farm-workers who have also disappeared from our farmland.

What a PR coup for the industrial farming lobby to now be seen as the 
good guys, making common cause with environmentalists to tackle 
climate change through the grow-ing of 'green' energy crops. Farmers 
across the world who have seen the prices they receive for producing 
their crops fall relative to the costs of growing them, would have a 
new, booming market and they would be valued for producing something 
everybody needs: energy. Meanwhile, processors of crops for food oils 
and other industrial uses would gain a bigger, competitive market for 
their outputs. For local politicians, more crushing and refining 
plants equals more jobs.

Vested interests

Whatever the NFU's vested interest in pushing biofuels, the policy 
framework coming from the European Commission and UK government seems 
modest and reasonable. The EU Directive 'on the promotion of biofuels 
or other renewable fuels for transport' sets a target for member 
states to achieve a substitution of petrol and diesel with biofuels 
of 5.75 per cent by 2010, with an estimated maximum of around 10 per 
cent by 2015.

Yet even meeting these targets will be near impossible, and indeed 
many member states, Britain among them, are already falling behind. 
Figures from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and 
Development (OECD) show that Europe would need to convert more than 
70 per cent of its total arable land to raise the proportion of 
biofuel currently used in road transport to a mere 10 per cent.

In the UK, we currently use 37.6 million tonnes of petroleum products 
annually. To replace that with biodiesel from oilseed rape would 
require 25.9 million hectares of land - which is not only four and 
half times greater than our total current area of arable land (on 
which the first-generation biofuel crops of oilseed rape, sugar-beet 
and wheat would be grown), but also greater than the entire area of 
agricultural land in the UK (18.5 million hectares).

The story is the same in the USA. Despite turning 55 million tons of 
maize into bioethanol, equivalent to one sixth of the entire US corn 
harvest, this distils down to only enough biofuel to substitute for 
three per cent or current oil and diesel used in road transport.

The rich countries of Europe and the USA are also looking further 
afield in pursuit of the maximum economic gain. Malaysia and 
Indonesia have cleared huge swathes of rainforest - one of the 
world's most valuable resources for natural carbon storage and 
biodiversity - to plant oil palms for biofuel production. 'The demand 
for biofuel will come from the EU,' Malaysian newspapers confidently 
report. The country now has over 30 refineries for producing biofuel 
from palm oil, including joint ventures with European-based 
companies, such as Dutch producers Biox, which have set up just 
across the North Sea in Rotterdam.

Friends of the Earth's 2005 report, The Oil for Ape Scandal - How 
palm oil is threatening the orang-utan, catalogues the environmental 
and human costs of the global biofuel market:
'Indonesia has one of the highest rates of tropical forest loss in 
the world, and illegal logging is rife. The island of Borneo, divided 
between Indonesia and Malaysia, has lost half its forest cover, while 
the smaller Indonesian island of Sumatra has lost more than 70 per 
cent. In Indonesia, the rate of deforestation has increased to two 
million hectares each year, an area of forest the size of Wales. A 
World Bank report has blamed commercial developments - especially 
oilpalm plantations - for the acceleration. In Malaysia, the 
development of oil-palm plantations was responsible for 87 per cent 
of deforestation between 1985 and 2000. The palm-oil industry has set 
up 6.5 million hectares of oil-palm plantations across Sumatra and 
Borneo, but the destruction extends to over 10 million hectares of 
rainforest. By 2020, Indonesia's oil-palm plantations are projected 
to triple in size to 16.5 million hectares - an area the size of 
England and Wales combined.'

Oil-palm plantations are estimated to be responsible for at least 
half of the observed loss of orang-utan habitat between 1992 and 
2003. Furthermore, acording to Friends of the Earth, plantations are 
often forcibly established on land traditionally owned by indigenous 
peoples. In Indonesia, between 1998 and 2002 alone, 479 people were 
reported as having been tortured in conflicts defending community 
rights, and dozens of people have been killed in land-tenure 
disputes. No wonder rainforest campaigners call biofuel made from oil 
palm, 'deforestation diesel'.

On the other side of the world, Brazil, the world's largest sugar 
producer and exporter, is also far down the route of converting 
cropland and rainforest to biofuel production.Half of Brazil's sugar 
cane harvest goes to make bioethanol; while the ever-expanding area 
of soya-bean plantings, already a leading cause of rainforest 
destruction in the Brazilian Amazon, is being diverted to fuel 
production. According to Greenpeace, an estimated 1.2 million 
hectares of what used to be rainforest have already - mostly 
illegally - been destroyed to grow soya beans.

Going bust

Norfolk may seem a long way from Borneo and Brazil, but by joining 
the global rush to grow large-scale biofuel crops, UK farmers will, 
like any commodity producer, have to compete at world market prices; 
and the entry of another group of biofuel producers will only 
accelerate the intensity of that global market.

A few huge-scale UK biofuel barons might be able to compete, but it's 
doubtful they will be that profitable, given that oil palm produces 
four times the biodiesel per hectare of oilseed rape, and is grown in 
countries where labour and life are cheap, and environmental 
restrictions limited or ignored.

 From the UK to Indonesia, farmers will be forced into ever more 
cut-throat competition, forcing down prices and causing ever greater 
rainforest clearance as Indonesian and Malaysian producers scale up 
to cut costs. Indigenous peoples, orang-utans and a fair number of UK 
farmers will be tossed into the flames of that brutal competition. US 
soya-bean farmers felt the heat last year: despite winning a tax 
break from the government for growing soya beans for fuel, their 
prices were undercut just three months later when more than a quarter 
of a million gallons of biodiesel made from Ecuadorian palm oil was 
imported.

Far from improving fuel and food security at home or overseas, any 
massive planting of biofuel crops will further erode it. As oil 
becomes more expensive to extract, and the consequences of using it 
more damaging to our environment, we will need to reduce our reliance 
on long-distance, oil-hungry food imports and use our own farmland to 
feed people, not cars.

The European Commission by setting a 5.75 per cent target for 
biodiesel as part of the overall fuel mix and paying farmers an extra 
45 Euros a hectare to grow them is encouraging the increased release 
of greenhouse gases due to the vast inputs of fossil-fuel-derived 
fertilisers used to grow them. The UK government has compounded this 
environmental idiocy by cutting fuel duty on biodiesel by 20p a 
litre. Far from supporting a 'green energy crop', they are, in 
effect, exacerbating climate change by stealthily subsidising the use 
of fossil fuels.

New markets for old crops

We have to stop seeing biofuel crops as a new solution, and rather as 
old commodity crops in search of new markets. The two main biofuel 
crops promoted in the UK are oilseed rape and sugar-beet. As a source 
of human foodstuffs, oilseed rape has seen some decline in market 
demand as food processors and consumers take nutritionists' advice to 
avoid the hydrogenated fats that oilseed rape is used to produce.

The once booming sugar-beet industry has been a political sacrifice 
to the hugely popular 'Make Poverty History' campaign. The protected 
quotas for making white sugar inefficiently from a root vegetable 
grown in the temperate UK, have been stripped away as one of the 
concessions to bring greater trade justice to southern producers, who 
can grow sugar-cane far more cost-effectively.

The main processor for that now redundant sugar-beet, British Sugar, 
has, along with the NFU, been pushing for greater support for 
biofuels. In desperation at the closing of one market and 
anticipation of the opening of another, British Sugar is building a 
£20 million processing plant at Wissington, Suffolk for turning 
100,000 tonnes of sugar-beet and wheat into bioethanol.

This may be good news for the East Anglian sugar-beet barons and the 
Caribbean sugarcane farmers, no longer having to compete against 
subsidised white sugar on the global market, but the enterprise has 
more to do with saving British Sugar's business than the planet.

In a crisp critique of the East of England Development Agency's 
support for a UK bioethanol programme comprising 12 such processing 
plants, Sue Pollard of the Green Party noted that just one plant, 
processing 100,000 tonnes of sugar-beet and wheat annually, would 
require 35,000 hectares of cropland to supply. Given the spread of 
suitable arable land, this would have to be brought in from a 
catchment area of more than 24,000 square kilometres, by HGV lorries 
totting up three million miles annually, and belching out 36,000 
tonnes of CO… in the process.

Feeding cars, not people

To date, the USA has provided 70 per cent of the world's grain 
exports. Now, countries dependent on US wheat and maize are getting 
nervous. Lester Brown of the US Earth Policy Institute gives a grim  
prediction:
'Simply put, the stage is being set for a head-on collision between 
the world's 800 million affluent automobile owners and food 
consumers.'

It may sound like far-fetched scaremongering to suggest that there 
could be a real conflict between the growing of crops to feed people 
and for fuel to feed cars. But the situation in other countries, far 
down the road in turning over their agricultural and previously 
uncultivated land to growing biofuel crops, suggests otherwise. 
'Cars, not people, will claim most of the increase in world grain 
consumption this year,' ran a headline on The Daily Telegraph's 
website, covering the US Department of Agriculture's projection that 
of the extra 20 million tons of wheat grown globally in 2006, 14 
million tons would go to producing bioethanol for use in American 
cars, with the remaining six million tons left to feed the world's 
growing numbers of hungry people.

Bioethanol plants for turning wheat and corn into fuel are being 
constructed across the US corn belt at an amazing rate, with 55 built 
or planned in Iowa alone. Over 50 per cent of all corn grown in South 
Dakota, one of the top 10 growing States, is already being diverted 
into making fuel for cars. This trend is worrying US livestock 
producers and food processors. That might be beneficial if it forced 
factory-farms to shift to more extensive, natural grazing systems and 
food and drink processors to rely less on  corn-syrup and other food 
and drink bulking additives.

But it's not just animal feed-lot and big food businesses that are 
feeling the pinch. As the price of corn and wheat rises due to 
increased competition between the US fuel and food markets, staple 
foods like bread become more expensive and less grain is available 
for export and as food aid.

Most recently, the  competition between food and fuel in the UK was 
heightened, with the announcement that the  government would end 
subsidies for food production crops by 2020 and replace these with 
subsidies for what environment minister David Miliband called 
'environmental security' - tackling global warming through  the 
growing of energy crops, protecting the landscape and reducing 
methane emissions.

It makes no difference if large areas of our prime food producing 
land are turned over to fuel crops, compelling us to buy in food from 
the world market - or if homegrown food security is sustained while 
other countries, such as Africa, are encouraged to grow our fuel. 
Either way, relying more on imports of food or fuel is not 
sustainable and contradicts the objective of curbing the 
greenhouse-gas-generating food and fuel miles inherent in those 
imports.

This increased competition between food and fuel use coincides with 
world grain stocks standing at their lowest level, and at a time when 
world population growth brings 75 million more mouths to feed each 
year. The heat waves in 2006 reduced both US and European harvests. 
This, combined with existing low global grain stocks and the 
increasing demand for wheat and maize for biofuel production, caused 
prices to rocket. With wheat prices now hitting a 10-year high, 
millers are predicting a knock-on hike in the cost of a loaf of bread.

Today, only in wealthy countries can most consumers afford to feed 
both themselves and their cars. Yet in the face of global climate 
change, it will become increasingly difficult to avoid the choice 
between fuel or food even in the West. As we consider whether to fill 
our bellies or our motorways it's worth considering this: the grain 
needed to fill a typical SUV's 25-gallon tank with bioethanol would 
feed one person for a year.

Robin Maynard was co-ordinator of the family farming body, FARM and 
is currently Head of Communications for the Soil Association. This 
article is written in a personal capacity.

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