Biofuels Could Strain
U.N. Goals of Ending Hunger
August 24, 2006 — By Alister Doyle, Reuters
STOCKHOLM — Rising production of
biofuels from crops might complicate U.N. goals of ending hunger in
developing countries, where 850 million people do not have enough to eat,
a senior U.N. official said on Wednesday.
"There's a huge potential for biofuels but we have to look at ...
competition with food production," said Alexander Mueller, assistant
Director General of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
Production of fuels from sugar, maize, soybeans and other corps is
surging, spurred by oil prices above $70 a barrel and a drive for more
environmentally friendly fuels from renewable sources.
"This is a completely new issue, we only know that this has impact on the
question of feeding the world," he told a news conference during a meeting
of 1,500 water experts in Stockholm.
Still, he said that a surge in biofuels production in the past year or two
had not hampered food supplies. "We have to find out what the situation
will be in 5 to 10 years ... a lot of research has to be done," he said.
Biofuels now make up only a fraction of a percent of world energy use but
have an economic potential to rise to perhaps 6 percent by 2050, according
to rough FAO estimates.
"This is an emerging issue with no clear figures and no guidelines,"
Mueller said. The rise of biofuels could also strain world water supplies
-- about one in three people live in areas where water is scarce, he said.
He also said that the world would need better management of fresh water to
"feed all the people and to produce energy for the world."
Mueller said biofuels presented one of three major challenges for farming,
alongside climate change and a rising world population.
Food output would have to rise by 40 percent in the next 25 years to keep
pace with a rise in the world population to nine billion people. That in
turn will strain demand for irrigation with one in three people living in
regions with water shortages.
And climate change might bring more droughts, floods, heat waves and
erosion. Most scientists say that emissions of greenhouse gases, largely
from burning fossil fuels in power plants, factories and cars, are warming
the planet.
Source: Reuters