Burning biofuels may be worse than coal and oil, say
experts
· Scientists point to cost in
biodiversity and farmland
· Razing tropical forests 'will increase carbon'
* Alok Jha, science correspondent
* The Guardian,
* Friday January 4 2008
Using biofuels made from corn, sugar cane and soy could have a greater
environmental impact than burning fossil fuels, according to experts.
Although the fuels themselves emit fewer greenhouse gases, they all have
higher costs in terms of biodiversity loss and destruction of farmland.
The problems of climate change and the rising cost of oil have led to a race
to develop environmentally-friendly biofuels, such as palm oil or ethanol
derived from corn and sugar cane. The EU has proposed that 10% of all fuel
used in transport should come from biofuels by 2020 and the emerging global
market is expected to be worth billions of dollars a year.
But the new fuels have attracted controversy. "Regardless of how effective
sugar cane is for producing ethanol, its benefits quickly diminish if
carbon-rich tropical forests are being razed to make the sugar cane fields,
thereby causing vast greenhouse-gas emission increases," Jörn Scharlemann
and William Laurance, of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in
Panama, write in Science today.
"Such comparisons become even more lopsided if the full environmental
benefits of tropical forests - for example, for biodiversity conservation,
hydrological functioning, and soil protection - are included."
Efforts to work out which crops are most environmentally friendly have,
until now, focused only on the amount of greenhouse gases a fuel emits when
it is burned. Scharlemann and Laurance highlighted a more comprehensive
method, developed by Rainer Zah of the Empa Research Institute in
Switzerland, that can take total environmental impacts - such as loss of
forests and farmland and effects on biodiversity - into account.
In a study of 26 biofuels the Swiss method showed that 21 fuels reduced
greenhouse-gas emissions by more than 30% compared with gasoline when
burned. But almost half of the biofuels, a total of 12, had greater total
environmental impacts than fossil fuels. These included
economically-significant fuels such as US corn ethanol, Brazilian sugar cane
ethanol and soy diesel, and Malaysian palm-oil diesel. Biofuels that fared
best were those produced from waste products such as recycled cooking oil,
as well as ethanol from grass or wood.
Scharlemann and Laurance also pointed to "perverse" government initiatives
that had resulted in unintended environmental impacts. In the US, for
example, farmers have been offered incentives to shift from growing soy to
growing corn for biofuels. "This is helping to drive up global soy prices,
which in turn amplifies economic incentives to destroy Amazonian forests and
Brazilian tropical savannas for soy production."
They added: "The findings highlight the enormous differences in costs and
benefits among different biofuels. There is a clear need to consider more
than just energy and greenhouse gas emissions when evaluating different
biofuels and to pursue new biofuel crops and technologies."
Andy Tait, campaign manager at Greenpeace, said: "We're already bought into
mandatory targets for the use of biofuels with very little thought of what
the environmental impacts will be. This study further confirms that there
are serious risks associated with first generation biofuels, particularly
from corn, soya and palm oil."
He said that the biofuel technology had been oversold by industry and
politicians. "It's clear that what government and industry are trying to do
is find a neat, drop-in solution that allows people to continue business as
usual.
"If you're looking at the emissions from the transport sector, the first
thing you need to look at is fuel efficiency and massively increasing it.
That needs to come before you even get to the point of discussing which
biofuels might be good or bad."
Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
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