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http://www.alternet.org/environment/54218/

The Great Biofuel Hoax

By Eric Holt-Gimenez, Indypendent

Posted on June 25, 2007, Printed on June 25, 2007

 

For an alternative viewpoint on corn-based ethanol, read " David

Morris's

Give Ethanol a Chance: The Case for Corn-Based Fuel. "

 

Biofuels invoke an image of renewable abundance that allows industry,

politicians, the World Bank, the United Nations and even the

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to present fuel from corn,

sugarcane, soy and other crops as a replacement for oil that will

bring

about a smooth transition to a renewablefuel economy.

 

Myths of abundance divert attention from powerful economic interests

that

benefit from this biofuels transition, avoiding discussion of the

growing

price that citizens of the global South are beginning to pay to

maintain

the consumptive oil-based lifestyle of the North. Biofuel mania

obscures

the profound consequences of the industrial transformation of our food

and

fuel systems -- the agro-fuels transition.

 

The Agro-fuels Boom

 

Industrialized countries have unleashed an " agro-fuels boom " by

mandating

ambitious renewable fuel targets. Renewable fuels are to provide 5.75

percent of Europe's transport fuel by 2010, and 10 percent by 2020.

The

U.S. goal is 35 billion gallons a year. These targets far exceed the

agricultural capacities of the industrial North. Europe would need to

use

70 percent of its farmland for fuel.

 

The United States' entire corn and soy harvest would need to be

processed

as ethanol and biodiesel. Northern countries expect the global South

to

meet their fuel needs, and southern governments appear eager to

oblige.

Indonesia and Malaysia are rapidly cutting down forests to expand oil-

palm

plantations targeted to supply up to 20 percent of the European Union

biodiesel market. In Brazil -- where fuel crops already occupy an area

the

size of the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxemburg and Great Britain combined

--

the government is planning a fivefold increase in sugar cane acreage

with a

goal of replacing 10 percent of the world's gasoline by 2025.

 

The rapid capitalization and concentration of power within the agro-

fuels

industry is breathtaking. From 2004 to 2007, venture capital

investment in

agro-fuels increased eightfold. Private investment is swamping public

research institutions, as evidenced by BP's recent award of half a

billion

dollars to the University of California. In open defiance of national

anti-trust laws, giant oil, grain, auto and genetic engineering

corporations are forming powerful partnerships: ADM with Monsanto,

Chevron

and Volkswagen, BP with DuPont and Toyota. These corporations are

consolidating research, production, processing and distribution chains

of

our food and fuel system under one colossal, industrial roof.

 

Agro-fuel champions assure us that because fuel crops are renewable,

they

are environmentally friendly and can reduce global warming, fostering

rural

development. But the tremendous market power of agro-fuel

corporations,

coupled with weak political will of governments to regulate their

activities, is a recipe for environmental disaster and increasing

hunger in

the global South. It's time to examine the myths fueling this biofuel

boom

-- before it's too late.

 

Myth #1: Agro-fuels are clean and green

 

Because photosynthesis from fuel crops removes greenhouse gases from

the

atmosphere and can reduce fossil fuel consumption, we are told fuel

crops

are green. But when the full " life cycle " of agro-fuels is considered

--

from land clearing to automotive consumption -- the moderate emission

savings are undone by far greater emissions from deforestation,

burning,

peat drainage, cultivation and soil carbon losses. Every ton of palm

oil

produced results in 33 tons of carbon dioxide emissions -- 10 times

more

than petroleum. Clearing tropical forests for sugarcane ethanol emits

50

percent more greenhouse gases than the production and use of the same

amount of gasoline.

 

There are other environmental problems as well. Industrial agro-fuels

require large applications of petroleum-based fertilizers, whose

global use

has more than doubled the biologically available nitrogen in the

world,

contributing heavily to the emission of nitrous oxide, a greenhouse

gas 300

times more potent than carbon dioxide.

 

To produce a liter of ethanol takes three to five liters of irrigation

water and produces up to 13 liters of waste water. It takes the energy

equivalent of 113 liters of natural gas to treat this waste,

increasing the

likelihood that it will simply be released into the environment.

Intensive

cultivation of fuel crops also leads to high rates of erosion.

 

Myth #2: Agro-fuels will not result in deforestation

 

Proponents of agro-fuels argue that fuel crops planted on ecologically

degraded lands will improve, rather than destroy, the environment.

Perhaps

the government of Brazil had this in mind when it re-classified some

200

million hectares of dry tropical forests, grassland and marshes as

" degraded " and apt for cultivation. In reality, these are the bio-

diverse

ecosystems of the Mata Atlantica, the Cerrado and the Pantanal,

occupied by

indigenous people, subsistence farmers and extensive cattle ranches.

 

The introduction of agro-fuel plantations will simply push these

communities to the " agricultural frontier " of the Amazon where

deforestation will intensify. Soybeans supply 40 percent of Brazil's

biodiesel. NASA has positively correlated their market price with the

destruction of the Amazon rainforest -- currently at nearly 325,000

hectares a year.

 

Myth #3: Agro-fuels will bring rural development

 

In the tropics, 100 hectares dedicated to family farming generates 35

jobs.

Oil palm and sugarcane provide 10 jobs, eucalyptus two and soybeans

just

one half-job per 100 hectares, all poorly paid. Until this boom, agro-

fuels

primarily supplied local markets, and even in the United States, most

ethanol plants were small and farmer-owned. Big Oil, Big Grain and Big

Genetic Engineering are rapidly consolidating control over the entire

agro-fuel value chain.

 

The market power of these corporations is staggering: Cargill and ADM

control 65 percent of the global grain trade, Monsanto and Syngenta a

quarter of the $60 billion gene-tech industry. This market power

allows

these companies to extract profits from the most lucrative and low-

risk

segments of the value chain -- hundreds of thousands of small farmers

have

already been displaced by soybean plantations in South America.

 

Myth #4: Agro-fuels will not cause hunger

 

Hunger, said Amartya Sen, results not from scarcity, but poverty.

According

to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, there is enough food in

the

world to supply everyone with a daily 3,500-calorie diet of grains,

fresh

fruit, nuts, vegetables, dairy and meat.

 

Nonetheless, because they are poor, 824 million people continue to go

hungry. If current trends continue, some 1.2 billion people could be

chronically hungry by 2025 -- 600 million more than previously

predicted.

World food aid will not likely come to the rescue because surpluses

will go

into our gas tanks. What is urgently needed is massive transfers of

food-producing resources to the rural poor, not converting land to

fuel

production.

 

Myth #5: Better " second-generation " agrofuels are just around the

corner

 

Proponents of agro-fuels argue that current agro-fuels made from food

crops

will soon be replaced with environmentally friendly crops like fast-

growing

trees and switchgrass. This myth, wryly referred to as the " bait and

switchgrass " shell game, makes food-based fuels socially acceptable.

 

The agro-fuel transition transforms land use on a massive scale,

pitting

food production against fuel production for land, water and resources.

The

issue of which crops are converted to fuel is irrelevant. Wild plants

cultivated as fuel crops won't have a smaller " environmental

footprint. "

They will rapidly migrate from hedgerows and woodlots onto arable

lands to

be intensively cultivated like any other industrial crop, with all the

associated environmental externalities.

 

Agro-fuel: a new industrial revolution?

 

The International Energy Agency estimates that over the next 23 years,

the

world could produce as much as 147 million tons of agro-fuel. This

will be

accompanied by a lot of carbon, nitrous oxide, erosion and more than

two

billion tons of waste water. Remarkably, this fuel will barely offset

the

yearly increase in global oil demand, now standing at 136 million tons

a

year -- not offsetting any of the existing demand.

 

The agro-fuel transition is based on a 200-year relation between

agriculture and industry that began with the Industrial Revolution.

The

invention of the steam engine promised an end to drudgery. As

governments

privatized common lands, dispossessed peasants supplied cheap farm and

factory labor. Cheap oil and petroleum- based fertilizers opened up

agriculture itself to industrial capital.

 

Mechanization intensified production, keeping food prices low and

industry

booming. The last 100 years have seen a threefold global shift to

urban

living with as many people now living in cities as in the countryside.

The

massive transfer of wealth from agriculture to industry, the

industrialization of agriculture, and the rural-urban shift are all

part of

the " agrarian transition, " transforming most of the world's fuel and

food

systems and establishing non-renewable petroleum as the foundation of

today's multi-trilliondollar agri-foods industry.

 

The pillars of this agri-foods industry are the great grain

corporations,

including ADM, Cargill and Bunge. They are surrounded by an equally

formidable consolidation of agro-chemical, seed and machinery

companies on

the one hand and food processors, distributors and supermarket chains

on

the other.

 

Like the original agrarian transition, the present agro-fuels

transition

will " enclose the commons " by industrializing the remaining forests

and

prairies of the world. It will drive the planet's remaining

smallholders,

family farmers and indigenous peoples to the cities. This

government-industry collusion has the potential to funnel rural

resources

to urban centers in the form of fuel, concentrating industrial wealth.

But

this time, there is no cheap fuel to drive industrial expansion and

there

will be no jobs for the masses of people displaced from the

countryside.

Millions of people may be pushed farther into poverty.

 

Building Food and Fuel Sovereignty

 

The agro-fuels transition is not inevitable. There is no inherent

reason to

sacrifice sustainable, equitable food and fuel systems to industry.

Many

successful, locally focused, energyefficient and people-centered

alternatives are presently producing food and fuel in ways that do not

threaten food systems, the environment or livelihoods.

 

The question is not whether ethanol and biodiesel have a place in our

future, but whether or not we allow a handful of global corporations

to

impoverish the planet and the majority of its people. To avoid this

trap we

must promote a steady-state agrarian transition built on re-

distributive

land reform that re-populates and stabilizes the world's struggling

rural

communities. This includes rebuilding and strengthening our local food

systems and creating conditions for the local re-investment of rural

wealth. Putting people and environment -- instead of corporate

megaprofits

-- at the center of rural development requires food sovereignty: the

right

of people to determine their own food systems.

 

Eric Holt-Giménez is the executive director of Food First/Institute

for

Food and Development Policy, Foodfirst.org.

 

© 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

When I see the price that you pay

I don't wanna grow up

I don't ever want to be that way

I don't wanna grow up

Seems that folks turn into things

that they never want

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