Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAleesha Chapman Modified over 9 years ago
1
Impacts of First Generation Agrofuels Food Communities Biodiversity Climate Agrofuel Impacts
3
Wilkins Ice Shelf, Antarctica
4
Drivers of agrofuel expansion Two Converging Imperatives ● Kyoto protocol / Climate ‘techno-fixes’ ● Oil depletion ('Peak Oil') One Dysfunctional Paradigm ● Economic Growth / Profit
5
US / EU Policy – going off the graph EU – 10% by 2020 (1% now) 2010 2020 US – 20% by 2020 (4% now)
6
AGROFUELS People in Mexico take to the streets as ethanol makes their staple food unaffordable Photo by Gregory Bull, AP
7
International Food Policy Research Institute... projects that the number of people suffering from undernourishment would increase by 16 million people for each percentage point increase in the real price of staple food
8
Agrofuel 'suitability' map of the global South Jatropha suitability maps for Africa and DR Congo, from IUCN website
9
The human cost of biofuel monocultures: pesticide poisoning in Paraguay
11
Landless People’s Camp in Front of Large Industrial Agriculture Estate, Upper Parana Soya expansion in Paraguay has driven 90,000 families off their land -
12
The camp is set on fire
13
Agrofuel expansion and human rights: The Indonesian example In West Kalimantan (Indonesia) alone, 5 million indigenous people are likely to be displaced by agrofuel expansion (Chair of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues) Protests against destruction of forests and community lands for palm oil, pulp and timber in Sumatra Photo by Feri Irawan, WALHI Jambi
14
South-east Asia’s peatlands hold up to 50 billion tonnes of carbon
15
Logging and palm oil expansion go hand in hand
16
Draining Borneo’s peat for plantations
17
Borneo ablaze: Annual peat fires pump billions of tonnes of CO 2 into the atmosphere
18
Climate change mitigation? ● South-east Asia's peatlands contain up to 50 billion tonnes of carbon. This carbon will be released as the peat is drained. 45% has been drained – the rest is likely to be destroyed largely to meet global demand for biodiesel. Peat drainage for oil palms, Sarawak, Photo www.air-co.org
19
Through most of 2007 the price of soya has been 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
21
Massive land-use change in global South
22
Legislating for a Biofuels Boom ● EU Renewable Energy Directive, 10% agrofuels in transportation by 2020 ● 5% mandatory interim target by 2015 ● Review in 2014, but key ecosystems will have already have disappeared by 2012
23
New Corporate Partnerships Agribusiness, e.g. ADM, Cargill and Bunge AND Biotech companies, e.g. Monsanto, Syngenta, Bayer, Dupont AND Oil companies, e.g. BP, TOTAL, Shell AND Car manufacturers based in Europe and the US, e.g.Volkswagen, Peugeot, Citroen, Renault, SAAB
24
Monbiot: 5-year freeze on Agrofuel targets FoE Paraguay and Argentinian NGO’s calling for moratorium Nearly 200 NGO’s calling for a moratorium UN FAO now calling for a 5-year Moratorium Certification cannot deal with macro-climate impacts or displacement Moratorium Calls
25
4 x 100x 400x 1x
26
Tuesday April 15 th – Downing Street, 6.00pm
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.