http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1658898,00.html


The most destructive crop on earth is no solution to the energy crisis

By promoting biodiesel as a substitute, we have
missed the fact that it is worse than the
fossil-fuel burning it replaces

   George Monbiot
   Tuesday December 6, 2005
   The Guardian

Over the past two years I have made an
uncomfortable discovery. Like most
environmentalists, I have been as blind to the
constraints affecting our energy supply as my
opponents have been to climate change. I now
realise that I have entertained a belief in magic.

In 2003, the biologist Jeffrey Dukes calculated
that the fossil fuels we burn in one year were
made from organic matter "containing 44 x 1018
grams of carbon, which is more than 400 times the
net primary productivity of the planet's current
biota". In plain English, this means that every
year we use four centuries' worth of plants and
animals.

The idea that we can simply replace this fossil
legacy - and the extraordinary power densities it
gives us - with ambient energy is the stuff of
science fiction. There is simply no substitute
for cutting back. But substitutes are being
sought everywhere. They are being promoted today
at the climate talks in Montreal, by states -
such as ours - that seek to avoid the hard
decisions climate change demands. And at least
one substitute is worse than the fossil-fuel
burning it replaces.

The last time I drew attention to the hazards of
making diesel fuel from vegetable oils, I
received as much abuse as I have ever been sent
for my stance on the Iraq war. The biodiesel
missionaries, I discovered, are as vociferous in
their denial as the executives of Exxon. I am now
prepared to admit that my previous column was
wrong. But they're not going to like it. I was
wrong because I underestimated the fuel's
destructive impact.

Before I go any further, I should make it clear
that turning used chip fat into motor fuel is a
good thing. The people slithering around all day
in vats of filth are performing a service to
society. But there is enough waste cooking oil in
the UK to meet a 380th of our demand for road
transport fuel. Beyond that, the trouble begins.

When I wrote about it last year, I thought that
the biggest problem caused by biodiesel was that
it set up a competition for land use. Arable land
that would otherwise have been used to grow food
would instead be used to grow fuel. But now I
find that something even worse is happening. The
biodiesel industry has accidentally invented the
world's most carbon-intensive fuel.

In promoting biodiesel - as the EU, the British
and US governments and thousands of environmental
campaigners do - you might imagine that you are
creating a market for old chip fat, or rapeseed
oil, or oil from algae grown in desert ponds. In
reality you are creating a market for the most
destructive crop on earth.

Last week, the chairman of Malaysia's federal
land development authority announced that he was
about to build a new biodiesel plant. His was the
ninth such decision in four months. Four new
refineries are being built in Peninsula Malaysia,
one in Sarawak and two in Rotterdam. Two foreign
consortiums - one German, one American - are
setting up rival plants in Singapore. All of them
will be making biodiesel from the same source:
oil from palm trees.

"The demand for biodiesel," the Malaysian Star
reports, "will come from the European Community
... This fresh demand ... would, at the very
least, take up most of Malaysia's crude palm oil
inventories." Why? Because it is cheaper than
biodiesel made from any other crop.

In September, Friends of the Earth published a
report about the impact of palm oil production.
"Between 1985 and 2000," it found, "the
development of oil-palm plantations was
responsible for an estimated 87 per cent of
deforestation in Malaysia". In Sumatra and
Borneo, some 4 million hectares of forest have
been converted to palm farms. Now a further 6
million hectares are scheduled for clearance in
Malaysia, and 16.5 million in Indonesia.

Almost all the remaining forest is at risk. Even
the famous Tanjung Puting national park in
Kalimantan is being ripped apart by oil planters.
The orangutan is likely to become extinct in the
wild. Sumatran rhinos, tigers, gibbons, tapirs,
proboscis monkeys and thousands of other species
could go the same way. Thousands of indigenous
people have been evicted from their lands, and
some 500 Indonesians have been tortured when they
tried to resist. The forest fires which every so
often smother the region in smog are mostly
started by the palm growers. The entire region is
being turned into a gigantic vegetable oil field.

Before oil palms, which are small and scrubby,
are planted, vast forest trees, containing a much
greater store of carbon, must be felled and
burnt. Having used up the drier lands, the
plantations are moving into the swamp forests,
which grow on peat. When they've cut the trees,
the planters drain the ground. As the peat dries
it oxidises, releasing even more carbon dioxide
than the trees. In terms of its impact on both
the local and global environments, palm biodiesel
is more destructive than crude oil from Nigeria.

The British government understands this. In a
report published last month, when it announced
that it would obey the EU and ensure that 5.75%
of our transport fuel came from plants by 2010,
it admitted "the main environmental risks are
likely to be those concerning any large expansion
in biofuel feedstock production, and particularly
in Brazil (for sugar cane) and south-east Asia
(for palm oil plantations)."

It suggested that the best means of dealing with
the problem was to prevent environmentally
destructive fuels from being imported. The
government asked its consultants whether a ban
would infringe world trade rules. The answer was
yes: "Mandatory environmental criteria ... would
greatly increase the risk of international legal
challenge to the policy as a whole." So it
dropped the idea of banning imports, and called
for "some form of voluntary scheme" instead.
Knowing that the creation of this market will
lead to a massive surge in imports of palm oil,
knowing that there is nothing meaningful it can
do to prevent them, and knowing that they will
accelerate rather than ameliorate climate change,
the government has decided to go ahead anyway.

At other times it happily defies the EU. But what
the EU wants and what the government wants are
the same. "It is essential that we balance the
increasing demand for travel," the government's
report says, "with our goals for protecting the
environment." Until recently, we had a policy of
reducing the demand for travel. Now, though no
announcement has been made, that policy has gone.
Like the Tories in the early 1990s, the Labour
administration seeks to accommodate demand,
however high it rises. Figures obtained last week
by the campaigning group Road Block show that for
the widening of the M1 alone the government will
pay £3.6bn - more than it is spending on its
entire climate change programme. Instead of
attempting to reduce demand, it is trying to
alter supply. It is prepared to sacrifice the
south-east Asian rainforests in order to be seen
to be doing something, and to allow motorists to
feel better about themselves.

All this illustrates the futility of the
technofixes now being pursued in Montreal. Trying
to meet a rising demand for fuel is madness,
wherever the fuel might come from. The hard
decisions have been avoided, and another portion
of the biosphere is going up in smoke.

www.monbiot.com




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