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Agrofuels …driving climate change ( a systemic view )

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Presentation on theme: "Agrofuels …driving climate change ( a systemic view )"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Agrofuels …driving climate change ( a systemic view )

3 Outline Two Converging Imperatives: Peak Oil and Climate Change The Agro-Biofuels Solution Three Impacts: Food, Forests, Climate

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6 An IPCC proposal for stabilising CO2: the Pascala and Socolow wedges. Each wedge saves 25 billion tonnes of emissions between now and 2050. Billions of tonnes of Carbon emitted per year Historical emissions Currently projected path 7 wedges 1955200520552105

7 Replacing Oil with Biofuels Bioethanol, Biobutanol, Biodiesel 1 Wedge = 24m barrels/day of bioethanol replacing gasoline by 2055 Requires 250m Ha of high yield plantation Or 1/6 of global cropland = land mass of India NREL

8 Fuel = Food Mexicans taking to the streets as ethanol makes their staple food unaffordable

9 A Declaration by Latin American NGOs: “We want food sovereignty, not biofuels… While Europeans maintain their lifestyle based on automobile culture, the population of Southern countries will have less and less land for food crops and will loose its food sovereignty… We are therefore appealing to the governments and people of the European Union countries to seek solutions that do not worsen the already dramatic social and environmental situation of the peoples of Latin America, Asia and Africa.”

10 Army repression against peasants protesting against soya plantations

11 The human cost of biofuel monocultures: pesticide poisoning in Paraguay

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13 Landless People’s Camp in Front of Large Industrial Agriculture Estate, Upper Parana

14 The camp is set on fire

15 Expulsion in Tekojoja, December 2004. Soya producers destroyed the local community’s fields

16 Soya monocultures are a green desert around the remaining small islands of forest, Soya Toledo, Nina Holland.

17 Sawit Watch Challenges Land Grab “Palm oil for biofuels increases social conflicts and undermines land reform in Indonesia… It is unavoidable that, as a consequence of Europe's biofuels policy, the land rights of indigenous peoples and local communities will be relinquished further, and that food security will be undermined and lands for agricultural purposes and subsistence livelihoods will diminish.”

18 Indigenous Penan people trying to stop industrial loggers from destroying their forest

19 Logging and palm oil expansion go hand in hand

20 Burning the rainforest to clear land for palm oil

21 South-east Asia’s peatlands hold up to 50 billion tonnes of carbon

22 Draining Borneo’s peat for plantations

23 Borneo ablaze: Annual peat fires pump billions of tonnes of CO 2 into the atmosphere

24 As ethanol pushes up the price of sugar cane, this rainforest in Uganda is to be sacrificed for sugar plantations

25 Protest against land grab: FoE Nigeria “It is a push by industry to make another scramble for Africa, grab the land and continue with business as usual. The industrial bio-energy push to increased bio- energy demand will be nothing other than an effort at extending the frontiers of neo- colonialism in its continued march on the back of the fabled market forces.”

26 In the past few months, the price of soya has started rising again, thanks to biofuels. And the Amazon is being cut down faster than before. Amazon rainforest destroyed for soya NASA: Rate of Amazon destruction correlates with market price of Soya

27 Burning the rainforest to clear land for soya plantations

28 Dry season fires are widespread along margin of Amazon. Fingers of cleared land typically form a “herringbone” pattern as they extend from roads

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30 Agro-Biofuels in the EU Germany is at capacity using 12% of arable land to achieve 1% transport fuel penetration Oil Seed Rape: clover/alfalfa – Red Kyte, Ortolan Bunting 60% Wetlands lost in N & W Europe 45% Butterflies 30% Reptiles Birds, Insects, Wildflowers EU Biodiversity Loss target (2010) EU Abolish Compulsory Set-asides from 2008 Rapeseed oil, Sugar Beet. Animal feed displaced to Argentina, Colombia, Brazil

31 GM Agrofuels Plant Genomes Microbes Potentially significant micro-lifecycle gains but 5–10 yrs away Bottom Line: Micro vs. Macro Lifecycle

32 Irony of Agrofuels  40% increase in fuel efficiency via Hybridisation  10 – 20% through weight reduction  20 – 40% through smaller engines built for economy  10% through aerodynamics and low friction tyres  30% efficiency by reduced travel speeds, careful driving, correct tyre pressures, clean engine oil etc  TOTAL = 110-140% efficiency = ½-¼ fuel = 13m barrels / day Pascala & Socolow achieve 24m b/d bioethanol = 17m b/d gas.

33 Climate Critical Data Gaia and non-linearity Currently: 383ppm CO2 450 ppm CO2e gives 30-60% risk of 2+C …Climate Tipping Point

34 State of Play  RTFO Biofuels Plan – 5%  EU Biofuels Plan – 5.75% / 10%  US Renewable Fuels Standard – 20%  China vast acerage planned  India following suit Mitigation: EU Fuels Standards Quality Dir Certification = False Legitimisation … because macro-impacts cannot included

35 Macro-Climate Impacts of Agrofuels  Land use change – deforestation  Land Use Change – peat and soils  Chemical Fertilisers – N2O emissions  Acceleration of climate feedbacks

36  Monbiot: 5-year freeze on Agro-Biofuel targets  FoE Paraguay and Argentinian NGO’s calling for moratorium  250 NGO’s and prominent individuals calling for a halt on all biofuel targets  Certification cannot deal with macro-climate impacts or displacement - wrong policy instrument Conclusion


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