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Biofuelwatch Presentation for CBD Side Event, 3 rd July 2007 Food Communities Biodiversity Climate Agrofuel Impacts www.biofuelwatch.org.uk.

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Presentation on theme: "Biofuelwatch Presentation for CBD Side Event, 3 rd July 2007 Food Communities Biodiversity Climate Agrofuel Impacts www.biofuelwatch.org.uk."— Presentation transcript:

1 Biofuelwatch Presentation for CBD Side Event, 3 rd July 2007 Food Communities Biodiversity Climate Agrofuel Impacts www.biofuelwatch.org.uk

2 AGROFUELS Protests against destruction of forests and community lands for palm oil, pulp and timber in Sumatra, Photo by Feri Irawan, WALHI Jambi

3 What are agrofuels? “We can’t call this a ‘bio-fuels program’. We certainly can’t call it a ‘bio-diesel program’. Such phrases use the prefix ‘bio’ to subtly imply that the energy in question comes from ‘life’ in general. This is illegitimate and manipulative. We need to find a term in every language that describes the situation more accurately, a term like agro-fuel. This term refers specifically to energy created from plant products grown through agriculture.” MST, Landless Workers' Movement, Brazil

4 Agrofuels are accelerating climate change Deforestation for oil palms, Colombia Fires to clear land for palm oil, Kalimantan Photo by Nordin, Save our Borneo

5 Peat destruction S.E. Asia Drainage: Dry peat - oxidises and, over time, emits all its carbon as CO2. 42-50 billion tonnes of carbon stored in those peatlands. Fires: Many set by plantation companies, greatly accelerate the loss of carbon. Of the 27.1 million hectares of peatland in South-east Asia, 12 million hectares are deforested and mostly drained.

6 Climate impact of global peatland degradation Source: Summary for Policy Makers, Working Group III contribution to the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report, May 2007

7 Agrofuels as a new driver of peatland destruction Indonesia plans 20 million hectares new oil palm plantations to meet biodiesel demand. $17.4 billion investment deals in Indonesian palm oil agreed this year. According to 2006 FAO report, growth in European rapeseed oil biodiesel has significantly pushed up global palm oil prices.

8 Amazon Deforestation Santarem, Para, Brazil, Photo: Greenpeace, Daniel Beltra

9 Soya expansion drives Amazon destruction According to a 2006 study by NASA scientists; The rate of Amazon destruction correlates with the market price of soya. 2007: Soya prices rising fast, largely due to biofuel expansion: ● Switch from soya to corn for ethanol in the US ● Sugar ethanol pushing soya into the Amazon ● Soya biodiesel expansion

10 Annual fires in the Amazon Fires and deforestation in Northern Mato Grosso, 2002 Satellite image from Earth Observatory, NASA, credited Jacques Desdoitres, NASA GFSC

11 What about Second Generation Agrofuels? Fischer-Tropsch biodiesel: Similar technology as for 'synfuels' from coal. Cellulosic ethanol: Genetically engineered microbes, fungi, enzymes, crops and trees to break through the protective system of cell walls and turn biomass into liquid. No positive energy gains at present. No environmental or safety assessments.

12 The next agrofuel feedstock? Eucalyptus Plantations in Uruguay and Bahia, Brazil

13 The human cost of monoculture expansion Repression against farmers trying to defend their land against soya expansion in Paraguay, 2004 – One of the countries now expanding soya even faster due to the agrofuel boom. Photos from www.grr.org.arwww.grr.org.ar

14 Sugar ethanol in Brazil “ Workers do not have any control over the total amount of their production and as a consequence over their salary, as they are paid according to the quantity cut and not for hours worked. This situation has serious implications for the health of workers and has caused the death of workers through fatigue and the excessive labor that requires cutting up to 20 tons per day.” From Declaration by CPT, MST, Via Campesina and others Photo: radiomundoreal

15 Voices from the South 1 “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.” Declaration by five large Latin American NGO networks, January 2006

16 Defending community lands against palm oil companies Choco, Colombia – 'Humanitarian and Biodiversity Zones'

17 Voices from the South 2 “These trends will put serious pressure on African communities to change the crops they grow, their access to land, food and forests, while our wilderness and forest areas are sacrificed. If Africa is to attempt to meet the vast energy requirements of the UK and the rest of the EU, then these impacts will be enormous.” From a submission to the UK Governmnent by NGOs from Kenya, Benin, Uganda, Ethiopia and Tanzania

18 Some of the problems with sustainability standards ● No true consultation with people in the global South; ● No proposals which address macro-impacts; ● No blueprint for true sustainability guarantees; Meantime, communities, food, forests and climate suffer due to government targets and incentives.


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