http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/18853/story.htm

Polish Orlen blasts bio-fuels bill as "uncivilised"

POLAND: December 2, 2002

WARSAW - Poland's top refining group PKN Orlen blasted plans to force 
fuel firms to boost the sales of biofuels to well above levels 
proposed by the European Union, which the country is set to join in 
mid 2004.

Poland's powerful farming lobby, backed by a rural junior coalition 
party, has already pushed the biofuels bill though the lower house of 
parliament and the controversial regulation will start its first 
reading in the Senate last week.

The bill - which aims to create new demand for crops such as rapeseed 
to help Poland's struggling farmers - would set from 2003 an 
obligatory minimum 4.5 percent level of biofuels' shares in total 
domestic fuel sales.

The EU wants a two-percent minimum level of biofuels as a proportion 
of all fuels by 2005, gradually reaching 5.75 percent of all fuels 
sold by 2010.

Poland is by far central Europe's largest fuel market with annual 
consumption of around 10 million tonnes, of which nearly a fifth 
comes from imports.

Biofuels are environment-friendly and often enjoy favourable tax 
treatment. They have many advocates among industry players as laws 
limiting pollutants grow stricter around the globe. They are also 
seen as key in lessening dependence on imported energy.

But Orlen, Poland's top fuels group with 1.5 percent of sales already 
comprised of biofuels, said the bill was unfairly setting high 
obligatory minimum biofuel levels and violating EU law by forcing 
fuel sellers to use only Polish bio-components.

"While in general we are decisively in favour of getting more 
bio-fuels in the market, this bill is simply uncivilised," Janusz 
Wisniewski, Orlen's deputy chief in charge of production, told 
Reuters.

"We are just about to introduce a bill which violates European Union 
regulations and which will have to be reversed the first day after 
accession," he added.

"MOONSHINE" FUEL

While Orlen theoretically could win out on the bio-component import 
ban, Wisniewski said lack of clear-cut quality guidelines could 
easily lead to "moonshine" fuels flooding the market.

"In Poland there are no standards for checking the quality of 
bio-components in fuel and this bill may simply bring more harm than 
anything else," he said.

Car makers, including the Polish unit of Ford Motor, have warned in 
the past few days that many engines used in cars driving on local 
roads could not handle high biofuel levels.

The bill - which has already sparked a public debate between 
environmentalists, farm lobbying groups and the fuel and refining 
industry - also allows for a controversial government prerogative to 
set a minimum price for crops used in biofuels.

Biofuels are combustible fuels that can be used pure or blended with 
conventional fuels and are obtained by processing plant oils, 
sugarbeet, cereals, and organic waste materials.

They include biodiesel which is made from plant oils such as 
rapeseed, sunflower and soybean and bio-ethanol which uses fermented 
sugar beets and cereals.

Story by Marta Karpinska

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE


Biofuels at Journey to Forever
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
Biofuel at WebConX
http://webconx.green-trust.org/2000/biofuel/biofuel.htm
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