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The
Myth of Biofuels
Edivan
Pinto - Marluce Melo - Maria Luisa Mendonça*
Recent
studies about the impacts caused by fossil fuels contributed
in highlighting the theme of bioenergy . The energy matrix is
composed of petroleum (35%), coal (23%) and natural gas (21%).On
their own, the ten richest countries consume 80% of the energy
produced in the world. Amongst these, the USA is responsible
for 25% of pollution to the atmosphere. Analysts estimate that
within 25 years, the world demand for petroleum, natural gas
and coal may have an increase of 80%.
The
acceleration of global warming is a fact that places in risk
life on the planet. It is necessary, however, to demystify the
principal solution presented at the moment and spread through
propaganda about the supposed benefits of biofuels. The idea
of "renewable" energy must be dismissed from a
viewpoint that takes into account the negative effects of
these sources.
The
propaganda of "green fuel" or "clean energy"
has been amply divulged in Brasil. "Used as a substitute
to petroleum derivatives, both ethanol and biodiesel become
instruments capable of deterring global warming" affirms
a text in the magazine `Global Rural´ (November 2006).
On the other
hand, there are several studies that contradict this idea.
Specialist in genetics and biochemistry, Professor Mae-Wan-Ho
of the University of Hong-Kong, explains that " biofuels
have been presented and considered erroneously as `neutral in
carbon´, as if they didn´t contribute to the green house
effect; when they are burnt, the carbon dioxide that the
plants absorb when they develop in the fields, is returned to
the atmosphere. Thus the costs of the CO2 emissions are
ignored as also is the emission of energy from fertilizers and
pesticides used in the harvests, the use of agricultural
machinery, the processing and refining, the transport and the
infrastructure for distribution." For the researcher, the
extra energy costs and of the carbon emissions are even
greater when the biofuels are produced in one country and
exported to another.
A study by
the Belgian Cabinet for Scientific Affairs shows similar
results: "Biodiesel provokes more health and
environmental problems because it creates pollution that is
more pulverized, frees more polluents that promote the
destruction of the ozone layer."
About ethanol
production, Mae-Wan-Ho explains that "it was not taken
into consideration the enormous liberation of carbon from the
organic soil provoked by the intensive sugar cane culture
which substitutes forests and pasture lands that, if they were
regenerated, would save more than seven tons of CO2 per
hectare per year than what bioethanol saves." Besides
this, each litre of ethanol produced consumes about four
litres of water which represents a risk of greater scarcity of
natural water sources and aquifers (groundwater).
In the case
of soya, the most optimistic estimates indicate that the
balance in favour of renewable energy produced for each
unit of fossil energy spent in the cultivation is less than
two units. This is due to the high consumption of petroleum
used in fertilizers and in the agricultural machinery. Besides
this, the expansion of soya has caused enormous devastation to
forest and cerrado in Brasil.
Even so, soya
has been presented by the Brazilian government as the
principal culture for biodiesel by the fact of being one of
the biggest producers in the world. "The soya culture
emerges as the jewel in the crown of the Brazilian
agro-business. Soya can be considered the lever which will
permit the opening of biofuel markets" state researchers
at EMBRAPA - Brazilian Company of Agropecuary Research. (Revista
de Política Agricola. Ano XIV, no. 1 - Jan.-Feb.-Mar.
2005).
Brasil´s
Role
Even though
it does not have sufficient agriculturable lands for the
increase of production, the European Union (EU) established
that by 2010, its member countries must add 5.75% of biodiesel
to its fuel and, by 2015, this mark would reach 8%. Several
analysts, however, estimate that besides the practical
difficulties of implementation, it would be extremely
difficult for this project to reach its objectives. According
to Professor Wae-Wan-Ho, "if the 5.6 million hectares
stock of land in the EU was cultivated with plants for energy,
we would save only from 1.3% to 1.5% of emissions from highway
transport, or about 0.3% of total emissions from the fifteen
countries."
The U.S.
government offers tax incentives so that industry increase the
percentage of biodiesel in ordinary diesel. It would be
necessary, however to use 121% (one hundred and 21 per cent)
of the total of agriculturable land to substitute the actual
demand for fossil fuels in that country.
In this
context, the role of Brasil would be to provide cheap energy
to rich countries which would represent a new phase of
colonization. The present policies for the sector are
sustained on the same elements that characterized the
colonization of Brasil: appropriation of territory, of natural
resources and of labour which represents a greater
concentration of land, water, wealth and power.
It is
estimated that more than 90 million hectares of Brasil´s land
could be used to produce biofuels. Besides this, the "efficiency"
of our production is due to the use of cheap labour - even
slave labour. These characteristics are divulged by government
bodies and by some intellectuals, who create the idea that
agro-business production would bring great benefits.
"Our
country has the greatest extension of land in the world that
can still be incorporated into the productive process"
state the EMBRAPA researchers. They state that the production
of biomass "could be the most important component of
Brazilian agro-business". With regards to the expansion
of ethanol production, they conclude that there is "possibility
of sugarcane expansion in almost all of the country´s
territory."
At present,
Brazilian sugar mills have the capacity to produce 800 million
litres of biodiesel per year, used in a 2% mixture with common
(ordinary) diesel. The established aim of companies in the
sector is to arrive at one billion litres by 2008 when the
prevision is to add 5% to fossil fuel.
Analyses by
the BNDES (National Bank for Social and Economic Development)
indicate this type of investment as priority and estimate the
construction of one hundred sugar mills by 2010. In 2004, the
Bank invested R$580 million in the sector and in 2006, this
figure rose to R$2.2 billion. Brasil produces at the moment
seventeen billion litres of alcohol per year. According to
BNDES, it would be necessary to produce eight billion litres
more so as to be able attend the internal market. Thus the
Bank foresees that Brasil must expand its production to other
countries. With the pretension of controlling 50% of the world
market, BNDES estimates that Brasil will arrive at the figure
of producing 110 billion litres per year.
"Just in
the cerrado (bioma in the Brazilian Centre-West region),
20 million hectares of land could be made available for the
planting of grain crops" an EMBRAPA report reveals. In
the North East, according to the researchers, "just for
mamona (castor) oil there is an area of three million hectares
able for cultivation." Furthermore, they state that
"the Brazilian Amazonian Region possesses the greatest
potential in the world for the plantation of dendê (palm)
oil.
This product,
however, is known as "diesel of forest destruction".
The massive production of palm oil has already caused the
devastation of great extensions of forest in Colombia, Ecuador
and Indonesia. In Malaysia, the greatest producer of palm oil
in the world, 87% of forests have been devastated.
Besides the
destruction of the environment and the use of agricultural
lands for the production of biomass, there are other polluting
effects in the process, such as the construction of transport
infrastructure, warehouses for storage, which demand a great
quantity of energy, of in-puts ((fertilizers and agro-toxics)
and of irrigation to guarantee the increase of production.
Brasil can
also fulfill the mission of legitimizing the foreign policy of
the U.S. government. In a visit to Brasil in February 2007,
the Sub-secretary of State, Nicholas Burns, affirmed that
"the research and the development of biofuels can be the
symbolic hub of a new and stronger partnership between Brasil
and the U.S." The two countries control 70% of world
production of ethanol. According to Burns, "energy tends
to distort the power of some states which we think have a
negative balance in the world, such as Venezuela and
Iran." (Folha de São Paulo, 7 Feb. 2007).
The expansion
of bioenergy production is of great interest to companies
engaged in GMO - genetically modified organism (GMO). They
hope to obtain greater acceptance from the public if they
present GMO products as sources of "clean" energy.
"All the
companies that produce GMOs - Syngenta, Monsanto, Dupont, Dow,
Bayer, Basf - have investments in cultures conceived for the
production of biofuels, such as ethanol and biodiesel. They
have, besides this, agreements with transnational companies
such as Cargill, Archer, Daniel Midland, Bunge, which dominate
the world market for cereals. In the majority of cases, the
investigation is directed at obtaining new types of genetic
manipulation of corn, sugar cane, soya, amongst others,
converting them into non-eatable cultures which increases
dramatically the risks which on their own already imply
transgenic contamination" explains Silvia Ribeiro,
researcher for the ETC Group, Mexico.
According to
Eric Holt-Gimenez, coordinator of Food First, "Three
big companies (ADM, Cargill, Monsanto) are forging their
empire: genetic engineering, processing and transport - an
alliance that will bind production to the sale of ethanol."
And he adds that "other agro-business companies like
Bunge, Syngenta, Bayer and Dupont, allied to petroleum
transnationals like Shell, TOTAL, and British Petroleum, and
also to autobuilders such as VW, Peugeot, Citröen, Renault
and SAAB, form an unprecedented partnership with a view to
great profits with biofuels".
The Role of
Peasant Agriculture
Edna Carmélio,
biofuels coordenator at the Brazilian Agrarian Development
Ministry states:" the production of ethanol concentrates
wealth. On the other hand, biodiesel, even though is not
exclusive to family agriculture, has a strong social component."
Experiences
with the plantation of castor (mamona) by small farmers in the
Northeast of Brasil show the risk of dependency on big
agricultural companies who control prices, processing and
distribution of production. The peasants are used to give
legitimacy to agro-business, through the distribution of
"socially acceptable fuel" certificates.
The expansion
of biofuels production puts at risk food sovereignty and can
deeply aggravate the problem of world hunger. In Mexico, for
example, the increase of corn exports to sustain the ethanol
market in the U.S. caused an increase of 400% in the price of
the product, which is the population´s main food source.
This model
causes negative impacts in peasant, riverside, Indigenous and
rural Afro-Brazilian (quilombo) communities who have
their territories threatened by large corporations. Silvia
Ribeiro alerts to the fact that "now it is automobiles,
not persons, that demand the annual production of cereals. The
quantity of grains that is required to fill the tank of a
pick-up would be sufficient to feed a person for a year."
Some company
analysts even admit that there are environmental problems and
risk to the production of food, but that we must choose the ´lesser
evil´. In this case, they defend even the destruction of
forests with the objective of expanding their profits with the
production of bioenergy - also known as "green gold".
Realistically,
a change in the energy model which would really seek to
preserve life on the planet would have to also signify a
profound change in the present patterns of consumption, in the
concept of development and in the very organization of our
societies. It is necessary to invest in alternatives such as
wind, solar, photosynthesis, sea and geotermic energy. To
discuss new sources of energy, however, implies in the first
place to reflect on at whose service this new model will be.
The construction of a new energy model must take into account
who it is that will benefit or what purpose it will serve.
The
agricultural model must be based on agro-ecology and on the
diversification of production. It is of urgency that the
peasant experiences of agriculture be saved and multiplied,
taking the diversity of ecosystems as a starting point. There
are multiple technologies and traditional knowledge of
production such as agro-forestry, agro-pastoral systems -
integrated and time-proven. There are also local ways and
means for gathering, holding, managing and using water for
consumption and production that preserve natural sources.
These are not
simplistic solutions. Neither is it sufficient to change
individual "consumer" attitudes, such as buying
another type of car or light bulb, etc. The main polluters,
responsible for global warming, are precisely the big
companies that destroy the forest and pollute the environment
- the same companies - petroleum, automobile, agricultural
amongst others - that expect to profit from bioenergy.
*Edivan Pinto
& Marluce Melo are members of the Pastoral Land Commission
- CPT. Maria
Luisa Mendonça is a member of Social Network for Justice and
Human Rights
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