UN
warning on sustainable biofuels
AFP
The
United States is the world's largest producer of ethanol from corn
Al-Jazeera
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com
05 14 07
The
United Nations has announced guidelines aimed at tackling the rapidly
growing bioenergy industry, which it says may threaten
the availability of adequate food supplies.
UN-Energy, which was created to promote global consistency on energy
matters, released its report, Sustainable Energy: a Framework for
Decision Makers, on Wednesday.
It said the developing biofuel industries could provide clean energy
services to millions of people who currently lack them, while generating
income and creating jobs in poorer areas of the world.
However, it said production could particularly hit the poor, who
spend more of their income on food.
UN-Energy said: "The rapid growth in first-generation liquid
biofuels production will raise agricultural commodity prices and
could have negative economic and social effects, particularly on
the poor who spend a large share of income on food."
Supplies threatened
The agency said biofuel production had already appeared to have
driven up the price of maize this year and last.
"The availability of adequate food supplies could be threatened
by biofuel production to the extent that land, water and other productive
resources are diverted away from food production," it said.
However, it also said: "Modern bioenergy could make energy
services more widely and cheaply available in remote rural areas,
supporting productivity growth in agriculture or other sectors
with positive implications for food availability and access."
The document came as environment and development ministers from
around the world are preparing to meet for the UN commission on sustainable
development.
'Disorganised and misinformed'
Gustavo Best,
senior energy coordinator at the UN food and agriculture organisation,
said that the recommendations were needed because the
growth in the industry "is so fast and so disorganised ... and
so misinformed".
Among the suggestions made by UN-Energy was that crops that require
high fossil energy inputs, such as conventional fertilisers, and
valuable farm land should be avoided.
But it also said
that sustainable energy crops could have a negative impact if these
replace primary forests, "resulting in large
releases of carbon from the soil and forest biomass that negate any
benefits of biofuels for decades".
The report called
for the creation of an international bioenergy certification scheme,
including greenhouse gas certification, to
ensure that products meet environmental standards "all the way
from the fields to the fuel tanks".
Production doubled
Biofuels are energy sources that have been extracted from all kinds
of living matter, such as sugar, corn or rapeseed oil.
Their proponents argue that they burn more cleanly than traditional
fuels and are fast gaining popularity d amid high oil prices and
a battle against global warming.
Global production of biofuels has doubled in the past five years
and was likely to double again in the next four years, UN-Energy
said.
In March, the United States, China, India, Brazil, South Africa
and the European Commission, announced the creation of the international
biofuels forum, which aims to increase global production and use
of biofuels.
Brazil is the biggest producer of ethanol from sugar cane, while
the United States holds the same position for corn and together they
make up 70 per cent of the global market.
Al-Jazeera 05
09 07
Copyright© 2007
Al-Jazeera. All
Rights Reserved.