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Published byLenard Jennings Modified over 9 years ago
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Human rights Professor Simon Caney Professor in Political Theory, Department of Politics and International Relations, and Magdalen College, University of Oxford
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Principle 1: Human rights Biofuels development should not be at the expense of people’s essential rights (including access to sufficient food and water, health rights, work rights and land entitlements)
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The current situation Target-based policies encourage rapid production of biofuels Reported problems include: Local food shortages and price spikes Displacement of indigenous populations from their land Poor working conditions However Employment opportunities Local energy sources in ‘fuel poor’ areas
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Recent progress 23 March 2011 - Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels certification scheme announced: “Biofuels shall not be at the expense of human rights, including food security” Renewable Energy Directive includes a commitment to monitoring human rights UK has developed social sustainability standards (however, RTFO-Meta Standard lacks mention of protecting food security)
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Challenges for the future Will voluntary schemes be enough? Complex relationship between world food supply and hunger Policies to support small-scale local production are important
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Recommendations Biofuels policy targets should set out to avoid incentivising human rights abuses Monitoring systems to protect human rights abuses A compulsory certification scheme similar to the one proposed by the Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels
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