Biofuel Boom Sparks Environmental Fears
Mario Osava
Inter Press Service News Agency (http://ipsnews.net/)
RIO DE JANEIRO, Sep 22 (Tierramérica) - The use of biofuels is
on the rise in Latin America and is feeding dreams of abundance in
countries like Argentina and Colombia. But the experience of Brazil, a
pioneer in this alternative energy, raises questions about their
potential negative environmental consequences.
With ethanol and biodiesel as a springboard, Brazil's President Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva aims to turn his country into an energy
superpower -- in contrast to the 1970s when the Brazilian economy was
thrashed by its dependence on oil imports and its dramatic price hikes.
But environmentalists warn that although biofuels reduce emissions of
greenhouse gases (which lead to global climate change), they could also
trigger a massive expansion of the biofuel crops, pushing the
agricultural frontier deeper into the forests, destroying habitat and
biodiversity.
Alone for three decades in widespread use of ethanol, or ethyl alcohol,
to replace a portion of gasoline in vehicles, Brazil developed
technologies and a sugarcane economy that ensure its absolute
competitiveness in exports, still limited by protectionist barriers and
an unstable international market. And this South American giant intends
to fight for the biodiesel market, where it lacks the same pioneering
history.
Other countries in the region are trying to emulate the Brazilian
strategy. Colombia and Argentina stand out for strengthening
legislation to encourage development of biofuels.
A 2001 Colombian law stipulates that the country's gasoline must have
10 percent ethanol in 2009, with gradual increases to 25 percent in 15
to 20 years. A similar bill is being drafted for biofuel, based on the
African palm, from which 600,000 tonnes of oil are already being
produced yearly as food.
"Colombia could be third in production of biofuels, surpassed only by
the United States and Brazil, if production of palm oil for biodiesel
comes out favourably," David Cala, director of CORPODIB, a consortium
of businesses, university and technology centres involved in industry
development of biotechnology, told Tierramérica.
Exports could reach 10 million litres daily of alcohol from sugarcane
and beets, and three million tonnes a year of biodiesel -- two to three
times greater than domestic consumption -- in 15 to 20 years, estimates
Cala.
In Argentina, the Biofuels Act, approved in April, imposes a
requirement of five percent biodiesel or ethanol in petroleum
derivatives beginning in January 2010.
"That obligatory minimum, which could be more," requires 600,000 tonnes
of biodiesel and 160,000 tonnes of ethanol annually for the domestic
market, which would absorb eight and three percent, respectively, of
national output of soybeans and maize, Miguel Almada, an economist for
the National Biofuels Programme, told Tierramérica.
But furthermore, "in development is an export industry for ethanol and
biodiesel of around two million tonnes per year," he added.
These optimistic economic forecasts should, however, take into account
the environment variable. And Brazil's experience in this regard can
teach some lessons.
"It is worrisome that a new economic cycle based on biofuels would
trigger the expansion of monoculture crops and, consequently,
deforestation," says Délcio Rodrigues, an energy expert with
Vitae Civilis, a Brazilian non-governmental organisation that is active
in fighting climate change.
The sugarcane economy is not a good environmental model. In the
southeastern state of Sao Paulo, which produces 70 percent of Brazil's
alcohol, the companies generally do not obey the Forestry Code, which
requires nature preservation of 20 percent of rural properties.
Furthermore, the cane fields are burned to facilitate the harvest,
which creates serious local air pollution, said Rodrigues in a
Tierramérica interview.
Soy, the main raw material for biodiesel in Brazil, due to its massive
current production, "has already become one of the principal factors
behind deforestation of the Amazon and the Cerrado, a biome of
savannahs and scrub forests that covers the extensive central area of
Brazil," said the expert.
Biodiesel began to be added to petroleum-based diesel in Brazil at a
proportion of two percent, and that will be increased to five percent
in 2013. The country has opted for H- BIO, a process of hydroconversion
developed by the state-run oil giant Petrobras, which adds up to 18
percent plant or animal oil in the petroleum refining process to
produce diesel.
Petrobras has already adapted three of its refineries, and plans to
begin production in December, seeking to save on imports of 256 million
litres of diesel next year, and a billion litres by 2010. Soybean oil
will be the main input. H-BIO will not affect biodiesel because they
are complementary, say energy authorities.
Consumption of 840 million litres of biodiesel is forecast for 2007,
with a mix of two percent. The programme was designed to favour family
farming for the production of castor oil, palm and other sources of
vegetable oils, with tax exemptions especially for Brazil's poorest
regions, in the northeast and north.
However, the plan involves small farmers only as simple suppliers of
oil-producing crops, without including them in the agro-industrial
process, in cooperatives that at least process the harvests for the
oils, said Rodrigues. Petrobras should assume "social responsibility",
he said, adding that pressure from European importers to respect
environmental standards could prevent some harm.
Studies by the ministries of agriculture and environment identified --
in the Brazilian states that already have infrastructure to produce
alcohol -- 15 million hectares of degraded areas that would be
appropriate for agricultural expansion, Vania Araújo, from the
Environment Ministry, told Tierramérica.
This could triple the six million hectares currently planted with
sugarcane, theoretically without invading protected areas, but it would
require a good monitoring system coordinated with the state
governments, because the environmental authority is decentralised, said
the official.
(*Mario Osava is an IPS correspondent. With reporting by Marcela
Valente in Argentina and Yadira Ferrer in Colombia. Originally
published Sep. 16 by Latin American newspapers that are part of the
Tierramérica network. Tierramérica is a specialised news
service produced by IPS with the backing of the United Nations
Development Programme and the United Nations Environment Programme.)
(END/2006)