Call
for an immediate moratorium on EU incentives for agrofuels, EU imports
of agrofuels and EU agroenergy monocultures
The undersigned
call for an immediate moratorium on EU incentives for agrofuels and
agroenergy from large-scale monocultures including tree plantations and
a moratorium on EU imports of such agrofuels. This
includes the immediate suspension of all targets, incentives such as
tax breaks and subsidies which benefit agrofuels from large-scale
monocultures, including financing through carbon trading mechanisms,
international development aid or loans from international finance
organisations such as the World Bank. This
call also responds to the growing number of calls from the global south
against agrofuel monocultures[1],
which EU targets are helping to promote.
Background:
Agrofuels
are liquid fuels from biomass, which consists of crops and trees grown
specifically for that purpose on a large scale. Agrofuels are currently produced from crops
such as maize, oil palm, soya, sugar cane, sugar beet, oilseed rape,
canola, jatropha, rice and wheat. Agrofuels are designed to replace petroleum, mainly in
road vehicles and trains. Biodiesel
and ethanol are the main types of fuel produced. Agrofuels do not include
biofuels derived from waste, such as biogas from manure or landfill, or
waste vegetable oil, or from algae.
Agrofuels are
being promoted by governments and international institutions as a means
of reducing greenhouse gas emissions from transport, and improving
'energy security', i.e. of helping to ensure regular supplies,
stabilise the price of oil and mitigate the impacts of volatile oil
prices and possible peak oil. Public support for agrofuels is further
justified on the basis of their claimed positive impacts on rural
development and jobs in producer countries, promises of 'second
generation' agrofuels whose production will not compete with the
production of food, and assumptions about the availability of large
amounts of 'degraded' or unused land.
Agrofuels are
also being strongly promoted by industry. New corporate partnerships
are being formed between agrobusinesses, biotech companies, oil
companies and car manufacturers. Billions of dollars are being invested
in the agrofuel sector in a development often likened to a 'green
goldrush', in which countries are turning land over to agrofuel crops
and developing infrastructure for processing and transporting them.
Impacts of agrofuels from
large-scale monocultures:
Agrofuels are
generally grown as monocultures (including plantations), often covering
thousands of hectares. In order to compete in the market, they require
government support such as subsidies and tax breaks. Support for
agrofuels has to date failed to acknowledge the negative social,
environmental and macro-economic impacts associated with this kind of
farming.
Forecasts
by different UN agencies predict that in future most agrofuels will be
produced in the global South and exported to industrialized countries.
Although presented as an opportunity for Southern economies, evidence
suggests that monoculture crops for agrofuel such as oil palm, soya,
sugar cane and maize lead to further erosion of food sovereignty and
food security[2],
threaten local livelihoods[3],
biodiversity[4],water
supplies[5] and
increase soil erosion and desertification[6].
Agrofuels are
currently being developed within the intensive, mechanised,
agro-industrial paradigm, using massive monocultures and inputs of
fertiliser and pesticide. There is strong evidence that such agrofuel
production will not mitigate climate change but instead may accelerate
global warming, as rainforests, peatlands and other ecosystems that are
essential carbon stores are being destroyed to make way for
plantations. There is also controversy about how much greenhouse gas is
generated by the agrofuel production process and whether agrofuels
provide any real savings once issues such as fertiliser use (and thus
increased nitrous oxide emissions[7]),
refining, transport etc, are taken into the equation.
GM agrofuels:
Many of the crops
currently being used for agrofuels have been genetically engineered
(soya, maize, rape). A decade of utilization has revealed that the
current range of genetically modified crops have not increased yields
or reduced dependence on inputs. However, proponents of genetic
engineering in agriculture are already using the threat of climate
change to argue for wider use of GM crops and the development of new
ones such as GM eucalyptus for agrofuel production. GM crops and trees
pose serious risks to biodiversity, ecosystems and the food chain. GM
microbes and enzymes being developed as part of cellulosic ethanol
research (so-called second generation – see below) could also pose
severe risks that have not been researched or even considered by
governments.
Second generation agrofuels:
It is being
suggested that a "second generation" of agrofuels can be developed that will solve some of the problems posed by
current agrofuels, such as competition between food and fuel
production. The aim is to find ways (including genetic engineering and
synthetic biology) of modifying plants and trees to produce less
lignin, engineering the lignin and cellulose so that they break
down more easily or in different ways, and engineering microbes and
enzymes to break down plant matter. Such high-risk techniques do not challenge
the pattern of destructive monocultures designed to feed increasing
energy consumption patterns. A moratorium on monoculture
agrofuels is needed now, to prevent further damage being done through
the over-hasty promotion of agrofuel crops. In the meantime, the
promises and potential risks associated with second-generation
agrofuels should be fully examined. Whatever the outcome, such fuels
will not be available for approximately ten years and decisive action
to address climate change is required immediately.
Scope of the moratorium:
The moratorium
called for by the signatories will apply only to agrofuels from
large-scale monocultures (and GM biofuels) and their trade. It does not include biofuels from waste, such
as waste vegetable oil or biogas from manure or sewage, or biomass
grown and harvested sustainably by and for the benefit of local
communities, rather than on large-scale monocultures. A moratorium on
large-scale agrofuels and their trade could favour the development of
truly sustainable bioenergy strategies to the benefit of local
communities - as opposed to the financial benefit of the
export-oriented industries.
Certification is no solution
at present:
Since public
support and targets for agrofuels are being justified for their
supposed environmental benefits, a number of different initiatives have
been started up to develop 'sustainability certification schemes'. The
undersigned organisations regard certification schemes, whether
voluntary or mandatory, to be incapable of effectively addressing
serious and potentially irreversible damage from agrofuel production,
the main reasons being:
As one
certification initiative from the Netherlands, the Cramer Report,[8] says: "Some of the impacts of biomass production are
difficult to assess on the individual company level, and only become
apparent on the regional, national and sometimes even on the
supranational level. This is true in particular for the impacts caused
by indirect changes in land use and is especially important in the
themes Greenhouse gas emissions, Biodiversity and Competition between
food and other biomass uses. In determining the sustainability of
biomass it is crucial to take these macro-impacts into consideration". At present, there are no concrete proposals
for macro-level policy, in addition to certification schemes, that
would deal effectively with these macro-impacts.
Why does a moratorium need to
be implemented with immediate effect?
Despite an
increasing number of civil society statements and evidence-based
reports expressing concern about the unintended but foreseeable
negative impacts of agrofuels and calls to halt their expansion, the
agrofuel rush is accelerating. The
decision of the high-consumption countries, notably the EU and the US,
to introduce significant incentives for agrofuels, such as mandatory
targets, publicly funded subsidies and tax breaks, is triggering
speculation and investment in plantations and enticing countries in the
global South to commit substantial portions of land to agrofuel
crop-production.
In the past 18
months, billions of dollars have been invested in agrofuel plantations
and refineries and associated infrastructure. In
Indonesia, $17.4 billion dollars of investment were pledged in the
first quarter of 2007, whilst the government plans to convert some 20
million hectares of land to biofuel plantations. 9-10 million hectares
of rainforest are acutely threatened in West Papua alone.
In Latin America, the Inter-American Development Bank has
announced plans to invest $3 billion in private sector agrofuel
projects. Governments in a growing number
of countries, including Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Ecuador and
Colombia, are implementing national strategies to boost agrofuel
production that involve financial incentives and investment in and
licensing of refineries and infrastructure projects, including new
roads, ports and pipelines. Those infrastructure developments will open
up old-growth forests and other natural ecosystems to destruction,
whilst accelerating the displacement of local communities by expanding
plantations. The impacts of this massive,
rapidly growing investment in agrofuel expansion will be irreversible
and irreparable.
Agrofuels pose a
particular threat to tropical forest and wetland ecosystems, as events
in Indonesia already indicate. Such forests play a vital role in
stabilising climate and creating rainfall. There is evidence that the
Amazon rainforest may be approaching a point where deforestation will
have reduced the vegetation so much that it can no longer maintain its
rainfall cycle, thus threatening much or all of the ecosystem with
potentially rapid die-back and desertification[9]. Further destruction of rainforests and
peatlands for agrofuels could push the planetary system into
accelerated warming, sea level rise and ecological change sooner than
fossil fuel emissions alone. If the current rush for agrofuels is
allowed to continue while certification and the necessary macro-level
policies are developed, the damage such schemes and policies are meant
to prevent will already have been done by the time they are in place.
The risks of a 'wait and see' approach are far too high. The EU should
apply the precautionary principle to its approach to biofuels and
implement a moratorium.
A moratorium will
immediately reduce the demand for crops and trees used as agrofuel
feedstocks, thus reversing current increases in commodity prices and
putting the brakes on the expansion of monoculture plantations for
agrofuels which is threatening ecosystems, food security, communities
and the global climate. It will provide
time to look at the consequences of large-scale agrofuel production in
order to make a sound and comprehensive assessment of their
socio-economic and environmental implications. This will include
assessing the foreseeable impacts of proposed agrofuel targets and
ensuring that proposed policies and safeguards are capable of being
implemented and preventing the serious negative impacts that are
already being experienced. It is essential that civil society, and in
particularly those most directly affected by the production of agrofuel
crops are given a fair chance to assess the impacts of the current
promotion of agrofuels. A moratorium on incentives for large-scale
agrofuel crop production and a halt to EU agrofuel imports will provide
the space required for this discussion.
Signatories call for
effective measures to tackle climate change:
Agrofuels have not
been shown to mitigate global warming; they actually threaten to
accelerate it. The undersigned support urgent cuts in greenhouse gas
emissions, based on climate science assessments, which involve a
drastic overall reduction in energy use in industrialised countries,
strict energy efficiency standards, and support for truly renewable
forms of energy, such as sustainable wind and solar energy, as well as
the protection of ecosystems and carbon stores.
Arbeitsgemeinschaft
Regenwald und Artenschutz (Working Group on Rainforests and
Biodiversity)
Arbeitsgruppe
Schweiz - Kolumbien (ASK) - Grupo de Trabajo Suiza Colombia (Swiss
Working Group on Colombia)
Asamblea
Coordinadora PatagÛnica contra el Saqueo y la ContaminaciÛn
Base Investigaciones Sociales, Paraguay
BI ìKein
Strom aus Palmˆl!"
Biofuelwatch
Bruno Manser
Fund (BMF) - Association for the peoples of the rainforest, Switzerland
Carbon Trade
Watch
Corner House
Corporate Europe
Observatory
Ecodevelop
EcoNexus
Ecoropa
FERN
Global Justice
Ecology Project
GRAIN
Grupo Reflexion
Rural
Munlochy Vigil
NOAH: Friends of
the Earth Denmark
Observatorio de
la Deuda en la GlobalizaciÛn (Catalonia, Spain)
Pesticide Action
Network, Asia and the Pacific
Pro REGENWALD
Rettet den
Regenwald
Robin Wood
Sawit Watch
SETARA
Jambi/YKR, Sumatera Indonesia
Solifunds,
Switzerland
The Gaia
Foundation
Transnational
Institute
Watch Indonesia!
World Rainforest
Movement
Your
organisation can sign on to this moratorium - please visit www.econexus.info or send an email
to h.paul@econexus.info
[1] For example: Official
Declaration of Chake —uh· on the Agro-fuels and Environmental
Services Traps, AsunciÛn, Paraguay, 24 April 2007; We
want Food Sovereignty Not Biofuels, signed by Alert Against the Green
Desert Network, Latin American Network against Monoculture Tree
Plantations, Network for a GM free Latin America, OilWatch South
America and World Rainforest Movement, January 2007. http://www.wrm.org.uy/subjects/biofuels/EU_declaration.html
Statement from SawitWatch - http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/biofuelwatch/message/245
[2] "How biofuels could starve the poor", C Ford
Runge and Benjamin Senauer, Foreign Affairs, May/June 2007, http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20070501faessay86305-p20/c-ford-runge-benjamin-senauer/how-biofuels-could-starve-the-poor.html
and Food and Agriculture Organisation, "Food
Outlook (Global Market Analysis)" No. 1, June 2007, http://www.fao.org/docrep/010/ah864e/ah864e00.htm
[3] "Oil
Palm and Other Commercial Tree Plantations, Monocropping: Impacts on
Indigenous Peoples' Land Tenure and Resource Management Systems and
Livelihoods", Victoria Tauli-Corpuz and Parshuram Tamang, report to the
United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, May 2007, http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/documents/6session_crp6.doc
and "El fujo del
aceite de Palma Colombia-Belgica/Europa acercamiento desde una
perspectiva de derechos humanos", HRVE and CBC, November
2006, http://www.hrev.org/hrev/media/archivos/flujoPalma/informe_es.pdf
[4]
"Agrofuels - Towards a Reality Check in 9 Key Areas", Chapter 4, Report
prepared by eleven organisations for SBSTTA 12, July 2007. http://www.econexus.info/pdf/agrofuels_reality_check.pdf
or: http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/docs/agrofuels_reality_check.pdf
[5] Water for Food, Water for Life: A
Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management", International Water
Management Institute, 2007, see: http://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/Press/coverage/pdf/Biofuel%20crops%20could%20drain%20developing%20world%20dry%20-%20SciDevNet.pdf
[6] "Peak
Soil: Why Cellulosic ethanol and other Biofuels are not Sustainable and
a Threat to America's National Security", Alice Friedman, Energy Pulse,
May 2007, http://www.energypulse.net/centers/topics/article_list_topic.cfm?wt_id=46
[7] "Biofuels Threaten to Accelerate Global
Warming", Report by Biofuelwatch, April 2007, http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/docs/biofuels-accelerate-climate-change.pdf
[8] "Testing
Framework for Sustainable Biomass", Final Report from the Project Group
"Sustainable Production of Biomass", 2007, http://www.lowcvp.org.uk/assets/reports/070427-Cramer-FinalReport_EN.pdf
[9]
"Climatic variability and vegetation vulnerability in Amazonia", L. R.
Hutyra et al, Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 32, L24712,
doi:10.1029/2005GL024981, 2005, http://eebweb.arizona.edu/faculty/saleska/docs/Hutyra05_Var.Vuln_GRL.pdf
, and also "A new climate-vegetation equilibrium state for Tropical
South America", Marcos Daisuke Oyama and Carlos Alfonso Nobre,
Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 30, No. 23, 2199,
doi:10.1029/2003GL018600, 2003, http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2003/2003GL018600.shtml
http://www.econexus.info/agrofuel_moratorium_call.html