Biofuel
boom threatens food supplies: Nestle
AFP/Getty/Scott
Olson

Corn grows in a farm field near Seneca, Illinois.
ZURICH
Petroleumworld.com March 24, 2008
Growing use of crops such as wheat and corn to
make biofuels is putting world food supplies in peril, the head of Nestle, the
world's biggest food and beverage company, warned Sunday.
"If as predicted we look to use biofuels to satisfy 20 percent of the growing
demand for oil products, there will be nothing left to eat," chairman and
chief executive Peter Brabeck-Letmathe said.
"To grant enormous subsidies for biofuel production is morally unacceptable
and irresponsible," he told the Swiss newspaper NZZ am Sonntag.
While the competition is driving up the price of maize, soya and wheat, land
for cultivation is becoming rare and water sources are also under threat, Brabeck
said.
His remarks echoed concerns raised by the United Nations' independent expert
on the right to food, Jean Ziegler.
Speaking at the UN General Assembly last year, Ziegler called for a five-year
moratorium on all initiatives to develop biofuels in order to avert what he said
might be "horrible" food shortages.
Diplomats from countries pursuing such fuels, such as Brazil and Colombia, disagreed
with his forecast.
Story from
AFP
AFP
23 2019 GMT 03 08
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